FLOEA OF THE BEISTOL COAL-FIELD. 151 



Pyrus torminalis, Sm. m Gloucestershire. A small tree 

 grows on the face of a low cliff on the Pennant near 

 the second mill in Glen Frome, Stapleton ; a situation 

 where it could not have been planted. See p. 67. 



(Enothera odorata, Jacq. west of Brean Down. On 

 Sept. 5, 1883, we saw one plant on the sands at 

 Berrow, S. See p. 70. 



( Antennaria margaritacea, K. Br. Found by Mr. D. Fry, 

 Nov., 1883, growing on the edge of a wood at Walton- 

 by-Clevedon. Its occurrence at a spot so far removed 

 from gardens and habitations, and where the rest of 

 the vegetation is purely indigenous, is very remarkable.) 



458/'' Centaurea solstitialis, l. Yeiioiv Star-tJdstie. 



Colonist. About a dozen large plants on sand near the 

 Lighthouses at Burnham, S., Sept. 5, 1883. The spot 

 had apparently been levelled for cultivation at some 

 remote season ; but was entirely waste at the time of 

 our visit. VII.— IX. 



(C. melitensis, L. There was another station for this 

 alien in 1883 : on dredgings in the Black Kock 

 Quarry, G. See p. 106.) 



488.* Crepis biennis, L. 



" Colonist. In a small field near Axbridge, S. ; likely to 

 spread." June 19, 1883. Rev. B. Murray. 



Pyrola minor, L. First record for North Somerset. This 

 is certainly the most important among recent additions 

 to our knowledge of the district flora. The dis- 

 coverer, Mr, E. Baker, of Clevedon, gave us a fresh 

 specimen with the following note : — " I observed it on 



