6 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 



Spiraa Ulmaria L. ( :: Y) Eagle Tor. — Agrimonia Eupatoria L. 

 var. \sepium Breb. ( ::: Y) Near Birchover. — Pyrus Aria Ehrh. 

 (G) Above Tansley. — Crataegus monogyna Jacq. var. laciniata 

 Wallr. ( :: G) Stanton Lees. 



Parnassia palustris L. (L) Grange Mill. 



Hippuris vulgaris L. (P) Markland Grips. 



Epilobium angustifolium L. var. \brachycarpum (Leigbt). 

 ( Yi Stanton. Most of the plants in the neighbourhood are true 

 E. angustifolium L. — E. parviflorum Schreb. (G) Stanton Moor. 

 This plant is rare on the Grit, but is the commonest Epilobium 

 on the Limestone. — E. montanum L. is the commonest Epilobium 

 on Yoredales and the Grit. Near Winster and Birchover, where 

 all three formations occur quite near to one another, this distri- 

 bution is very well marked. — E. roseum Schreb. (G) Tansley and 

 near Nether Loads. — Girccea alpina L. ( :;: Y) Near Wensley. 



Pnnpinclla Saxifraga L. (*Y) Darley. — P. major Huds. var. 

 dissecta Druce. (G) Near Milltown. — Silaus flavescens Bernh. 

 (L) Bakewell, Winster. — Angelica sylvestris L. (Y) Whatstand- 

 well. — Heracleum Sphondylium L. var. angustifolium Huds. 

 (G) Birchover ; (*Y) Whatstandwell. 



Cornus sanguined L. (P) Markland Grips. 



Galium verum L. var. \maritimum DC. (L) Plants exactly 

 resembling the maritime sand-dune form occur on the dry lime- 

 stone hillsides near Winster ; they pass into the ordinary form, 

 just as they do by the sea, and are hardly worth distinguishing as 

 a variety. 



Dipsacus pilosus L. (L) Mill Close. — Scabiosa succisa L. 

 (L)Pindale. 



Eupatorium cannabinum L. (Y) Rowsley, Whatstandwell. 

 This is characteristically a limestone plant in North Derbyshire ; 

 it is carried on to the Yoredale by the streams and rivers, but 

 rapidly becomes less frequent further from the Limestone. The 

 localities on G given in Mr. Linton's Flora are mostly on the 

 Yoredale ; if it occurs on the Grit at all it must be very rarely; 

 we have never met with it there. — Solid ago Virgaurea L. var. 



brica Huds. ( G) Birchover.- Bidcns tripartita^. (*Y) What- 

 standwell.— Tanacetum vulgarc L. (*Y) Whatstandwell, Matlock. 

 — Carduus crispus L. (Y) Whatstandwell. — Serratu la tinctoria 

 L. (C) Ilolymoorside.— Hicracium borcaleFr. (" :: Y) Whatstand- 

 well.— Lactuca muralis L. (G) Tansley; frequently with the 

 upper leaves 2-3 in. long, entire, oblong-lanceolate, obtuse. We 

 have not met with this peculiar state elsewhere. — \Tragopogon 

 pratense L. (eu-pratense). ( :;: L) Monsal Dale. At Boythorpe (C) 

 and at Creswell (P) plants were found with the flowers as long 

 as the involucral bracts, but with brown anthers. In Babington's 

 Manual, ed. ix., T. pratense L. is described as having " inv. 

 equalling or shorter than the flowers" and yellow anthers; 

 T. minus Mill as having " inv. about twice as long as the flowers" 

 and dark brown anthers. Our plants have brown anthers and 

 involucral bracts as long as the flowers. They seem to agree fairly 

 well with T. Lamottci Rouy in Bull. Soc. Bot. Fr. 28, p. liv. (see 



