1858] JOURNAL— ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE, BATH. 189 



Maij 31. I met the Vice-Chancellor, Dr. Philpott, and Mr. Har- 

 wood, the Surveyor at the Botanic Garden, when the latter told us 

 that, after a careful examination of the new and old overfalls, he 

 found that the new one (letting the water into the Garden) was 

 two hundredths of a foot higher than the old one, which is to 

 remain in the Trinity College Farm ; and that therefore, when the 

 water was running into the Garden, there was a height of water at 

 the head which supplies the town of two hundredths of a foot more 

 than there was a legal right to ; the height being always regulated 

 by the old overfall, over which it would continue to run, after it was 

 too low to allow of any going into the Garden over the new one. 



June 8. Cambridgeshire Naturalists' Club Meeting. Went by 

 train to Dullingham. Visited Dullingham Church, then by Burrough 

 Green and Brinkley Churches to Six Mile Bottom. In a field west 

 of Burrough Green Church there is plenty of Aquilegki. By the 

 roadside between Brinkley and the Station we found Malva moschata. 

 Hiley and I saw the Herniaria in the station discovered June 20th, 

 1855. 



June 10. Went to spend the day with Mr. Clay, the Vicar of 

 Waterbech. We went to Denny Abbey and examined it carefully ; 

 then to the Ely road. Afterwards to the church and site of the 

 Waterbech Monastery, and to the course of the Car Dyke, between 

 the village and the railway. The upper part of the dyke is an 

 exceedingly deep and wide cut. 



June 11. Newbould, Hiley, Stratton, and I went by train to 

 Fulbourn ; then botanized in the spinney between the railway and 

 the Wilbraham road, where we found Ophrys apifera and muscifera ; 

 then crossed the brook by the railway bridge, and walked along the 

 bank as far as Shardelow's Wells and the Fleam Dyke ; returned 

 through Fulbourn, and by the church at Cherry Hinton. 



July 2. Hiley and I went by Cherry Hinton (where we found 

 Galium eredum abundantly in the old pit in the fork of the road to 

 the great chalk pit), Teversham, finding in the lane Eosa systyla(1), 

 by the footway across Teversham Fen to Quy Bridge, by the High 

 Ditch Lane to Ditton, and the riverside to Cambridge. 



July 19. Left Cambridge and arrived at Bath . . . with Dr. R. W. 

 Falconer. Meeting of the Archaeological Institute to-morrow. 



July 20. First day of the Meeting. Called upon the Fowlers. 



July 21. In the afternoon walked to Hampton Down and saw 

 the Hut Circles there with Mr. and Mrs. Freeman. Walked back 

 and took tea with them instead of going to the great dinner of the 

 Institute. Dr. Guest read a splendid paper upon the boundaries of 

 the English and Welsh, shortly before the conversion of the former. 



July 22. Mr. and Mrs. Freeman and I went by train to Brad- 

 ford. We examined the bridge and little chapel upon it. Then 



