360 KAEER PLANTS OF CENTRAL SOMEESETSHIRE. 



CicJiorium Intyhus. Fields by the Cary below Somerton. 



Arctium majus. Fine by the Gary at Somerton. 



A. intermedium. Frequent by roadsides ; typical A. minus not 

 seen. 



Serratula tinctoria, Butleigh woods, flowers both red and white. 



Carduus nutans, acaulis, and eriophorus. All three common on the 

 limestone hills, and in pastures and by roadsides. 



Carlina vulgaris. Polden hills ; frequent. 



Centaurea 7iir/ra, var. radiata. Everywhere common, to the ex- 

 clusion of the type. 



C. Scabiosa. Frequent. 



Frigeron acris. "\Vall-tops near the railway- station at Wells. 



Senecio erucifolius. Frequent by roadsides. 



litida Conyza. Butleigh woods, and lane south of Somerton. 



Tanacetum vulgare. Banks of the Parret at the first lock below 

 Langport. 



Ligustrum vulgare. Frequent in woods and hedges with Clematis, 

 Vihurnum Lantana, and Cornus, evidently a true native. 



Gentiana Amarella. Butleigh woods, and by the side of the road 

 between Somerton and Langport. 



Erythrcea pidcliella. Slope of Polden hills above Hurcot. 



Chlora perfoliata. Butleigh woods and Echo hill. 



Verhascum Thapsus. Tops of walls at Street and Wells. 



Veronica AnagaUis. Banks of the Parret at Langport. 



^. Buxbaumii. Frequent in cultivated ground. 



Linaria spuria. Butleigh hill and fields at Somerton and Lang- 

 port. 



Salvia Verhenaca. Stony fields at Somerton. 



Mentha. Only liirsuta, yaludosa, sativa, and arvensis^^Qn. 



Origanum vulgare. Common on hedgebanks and in thickets. 



Calamintha officinalis. Roadside near Long Sutton. 



Galeopsis Ladanum. Cultivated ground at Somerton. 



Symphytum officinale. By the Cary at Somerton, and the Parret at 

 Langport, and also var. patens at the latter station. 



Lysimachia Nummularia. Frequent in damp places. 



Plantago media. Common in grassy places. 



Chenopodiumpolyspermum. Cornfields on Butleigh hill. 



C. ruhrum. Rubbish heap at Long Sutton. 



Cficifolium. Cultivated ground at Somerton. 



Atriplex patula, A. hastata, and A. deltoidea. All three frequent. 



Rumex pulcher. In the Millins at Somerton. 



Daphne Laureola. Side of the Somerton road near Langport. 



Euphorbia platyphylla. Potato-field at the west end of Somerton. 



Parietaria diffusa. Walls of Glastonbury Abbey. 



Humulus Lupulus. Walls between Glastonbury and Wells. 



Ulmus glabra. Hedges at Somerton. 



Salix. The species seen all common ones, viz., fragilisy alba, 

 triandra, viminalis, Smithiana, Caprea, and cinerea. 



Spiranthes autumnalis. On the Polden ridge, where the road be- 

 tween Somerton and Street crosses it. 



Iris /(Btidissima. Common in woods and by roadsides. 



Allium vineale. Wall-tops south of Somerton. 



