563 
dan‘ica. 
groenlan’ 
ica, 
_TETRADYNAMIA. SILICULOSA. Cochlearia, 
beating angular ave a in every respect cotresponding with 
the ordinary C. officina 
‘C. All the leaves Pfejeredsaltlanes: with tatberd-shapa 
1e base. 
angles at 
E. bot. 696=Fi/. Axe 10¢—Lob. oe 338. 1, oe jacks Ole 
2=Ger. em. 27\—Park, 848. _ B. ii. 939. ei Ox» 
ili, 20. 3~Pet. 49. 3. 
Stem not branched asin C, ofcinalis. Suckers trailing. All 
the leaves balbershegees or egg-shaped, with an angle on each 
side of the base. Leaf-stalks not toothed at the base, or embrac- 
ing the stem. Capsules en Linn. Stems numerous 
‘ir. Woopwarv. Bless. white 
cgi meson, Ger, em. 271. Patt 848, (Sr.) Danish 
curvy-gr res, Islé © an re, ai 
near Licnbadtick charels east Rar. “Dale » No pe 
E.] . A. Ma ays June 
C. Leaves kidney-shaped, entire eto 
- Barth, act. iii. t. 144. 
R anelenc very small, underneath very convex and ‘fleshy, 
without veins, very Rape le on ne leaf-stalks. Linn. 
Cochlearia hich ae grows on the mountains of Wales, Derbyshire, 
Yorkshire, and Wecemoreaad, of which hi have have now plants 
in my garden from Wales and Craven, yearly sow oo 
five continued the same for above 10 years. RiIcHARDSON 
in R. Syn. e same is confirmed in Mr. Sherard’s eile at 
Eltham, Drit, 74. Miller also, who from his manner of speak- 
ing appears to have cultivated it, speaks of it as a distinct spe- 
cies, and er it is biennial, but that the C. offcimalis is an an- 
nual. Sr. 
only a starved variety of C. offtinalis, Licutr specimens 
above mentioned seem to answer equally to the descriptions of 
c. groenlandica and officinalis, except that the Zeaves are ve 
rom-the specimens I have seen, I suspect it to be 
r. Woopwarp. From such differences in opinion, whatever 
may ie the ae plant of Linnzus, I am inclined to suspect that 
~ py us variety of the C. o is. 
ie 6 enquiries sent to Mr. Griffith, he’ favoured 
me with the he following esse re “« ‘The Cochlearia groen- 
landica is certainly not an annual. I cultivated it 3 or 4 yeat 
during which time it retaisied its diminutive state, which gavé 
me reason to suppose it distinct from the C. officinalis ; but I 
have since repeated the experiment, and it became as large as the 
Cochl. officinalis.’” 
Mountains of Caernarvonshire ;» about Llanberys, plenti 
fully. Huns. Mountains near Settle. Corr.” 
~ Linn. Hup5. Be Mut, 
SSS NE TE ee en eT Se AE Fel SS STS AS TEE STS eR Se Nau Te 
