268 CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS. 



Page 



Plentiful in Broad-bottom wood, near Mytholm- 



royd, six miles from Halifax, Yorkshire. Mr. 



Roberts Leijland. 

 347. 1. 7 from the bottom, read — Hierochloe. 

 34-9. last line, insert — See vol. 4. 58. 

 353. 1. 2, expmige the word " mostly." 

 360. before 252. PYRUS, insert— 



3. M. Cotoneaster. Dwarf Quince-leaved Medlar. 



Thorns none. Leaves elliptic-ovate, entire, downy 

 beneath. Germen smooth. Styles three or four. 



M. Cotoneaster. Unn. Sp. PL G86. FL Suec. ed. 2. 169. 

 Willd. V. 2. 1012. Ait. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 3. 206. FL 

 Dan. M 12. PalL Ross. v.l.SO.L 14. Crantz. Ausir. 

 fasc.2.37.L2.f.\. 



M. n.l093. HaU. Hist. V. 2. 33. 



M. folio subrotundo, fructu rubro. EngL Gard. Cat. 49. 

 t. 14. 



M. folio rotundiori, non serrato, fructu nigro. Amman. 

 Stirp. 201. t. 34. 



Cotoneaster folio rotundo non serrato. Bauh. Pin. 452. 



Cotoneaster. Bauh. Hist. v.]. p. I. 73./. 



Chamsemespilus. Cord. Hist. 115./. Lob. Ic. v. 2. 1 67./. 

 Ger. Em. 1454./. 



Ch. Gesneri. Clus. HisL v. I. 60./ 



Epimelis. Dalech. Hist. \9S./. 



On limestone rocks in Wales. 



On the limestone cliffs of the Great Ormshead, Carnarvon- 

 shire, in various places. Mr. W. Wilson. 1825. Com- 

 municated also by Dr. Pring, of Bangor, in 1826. 



Shrub. July. 



A small bush, with alternate, spreading or partly recum- 

 bent, round, leafy, brown, smooth branches; downy 

 and somewhat angular when young. Thorns none. 

 Leaves alternate, deciduous, ovate, or broadly ellipti- 

 cal, obtuse or acute, entire, an inch long, more or 

 less ; green, smooth and even above ; white, cottony 

 and veiny beneath. Footstalks short, downy. Stipulas 

 in pairs, tapering, chesnut-coloured, smooth j fringed at 

 the edges. Flower-stalks downy, from the same buds 

 as the leaves ; in our specimens solitary and sin- 

 gle flowered ; in exotic ones often branched, with three 

 or four flowers ; but always shorter than the leaves. 

 Bracteas minute, red, lanceolate, acute. FL droop- 

 ing, pale red. Mr. Wilson describes their structure 

 as follows. 



