194 COMPOSITE. 



CARLINA, L. 



380. C. vulgaris, L. Carline Thistle. 



Native ; on elevated commons, in old pasture land on the coast, 

 and on limestone rubble heaps. Rather common. July, August. 

 0. I. Between Tregantle and Crafthole, and near Downderry. Between 

 Sheviock and Trerulefoot Middle-gate. In heathy ground 

 near Clapper Bridge. 

 II. Moimt Edgcumbe ; Whitsand Bay ! ; Keijs., Fl. iii. 70. Between 

 Rame Head and Penlee Point. 

 D. III. Roborough Down. Near the church of Sampford Spiney. 



IV. Hoe, Plymouth ; Bovisand ; Shaugh ; Keys, ih. On limestone 



rubble at Cattedown, and on the eastern side of the Plym 



estuary. On limestone near Elburton. Newnham Park. 



Pastures near Hemerdon Ball. Yannaton Down. 



V. Wembury. Revelstoke, by the coast. 



VI. Kmgston, above the coast. By Meadowfoot Cove, Mothecombe. 



ARCTIUM, i. 



381. A. majus, Schhuhr. Greater Burdock. 



Native ; in waste spots by roadsides, and in bushy places. Rare 

 and local. July to September. 



c. I. One plant near Hessenford, by the road to the coast, 1873. 

 Anthodes immature when it was found ; but the plant believed 

 to be majus. 

 II. Under a hedge close to Cotehele Quay ; one plant, September, 

 1876 ; two in the locality, 1877. Two or three m an immature 

 state, but believed to be majus, near the Wen- Head, July, 

 1879. 



D. IV. Shalaford, Egg Buckland, 1866, 1872. On or about hedge-banks, 

 and by the road between Woodford Farm and Saltram ; both 

 right and left of the tm-npike road between Marsh Mills and 

 Plympton, 1872, 1877, &c. In an old limestone quarry between 

 Hay farm-house and the Plymouth and Totnes Road, in plenty, 

 intermixed with intermedium and minus, Augiist, 1872. A 

 plant by the Plymouth and Totnes Road, near the third 

 milestone from Plymouth, 1875. 

 V. Waste spot by the Plymouth and Totnes Road near Yealm 

 Bridge. Near Brixton, by the road to Plympton ; Jour. Bot. 



V. 310. 

 VI. By the Plymouth and Totnes Road near Flete ; a peculiar form, 



with prolonged root-leaves ; referred to majus by Babmgton. 

 This generally occurs in small quantity at any one spot. 

 First record : Briggs, 1867. 



