30 
T. Martyn. 
. 
Jenkinson. 
Withering. 
Huds. Fl. Ang. 
Withering. 
Gough’s Camden. 
Pilkington. 
PUBLICATIONS QUOTED. 
1763. 
Thomas Martyn. Plantae Cantabrigienses, &c. London. 
8vo. 
Potentilla Comarum. 
1775. : 
James Jenkinson. A Generic and Specific description 
of British Plants translated from the Genera et Species 
Plantarum of the celebrated Linnaeus. Kendal. 8vo. 
Saxifraga hypnoides. 
1776. 
W. Withering. A botanical arrangement of British 
Plants. Birmingham. 8vo. 
Cardamine impatiens, Thlaspi alpestre (Saxifraga 
hypnoides). 
1778. 
William Hudson. Flora Anglica. London. 2 Vols. 8vo. 
1787. 
W. Withering. A botanical arrangement, &c. 2nd Ed. 
8vo. Birmingham. 
Myosurus minimus, Arabis perfoliata, Dianthus deltoides, 
Silene nutans, Malva moschata, Geranium sanguineum, 
Rubus saxatilis, Pyrus Aria, Sedum Telephiwm, Drosera 
rotundifolia, Myrrhis odorata, Heracleum v. angusti- 
folium, Dipsacus silvestris, Filago minima, Centaurea 
Cyanus, Polemonium, Atropa Belladonna, Lathraea 
squamaria, Polygonum Bistorta, Viscum album, Epipactis 
latifolia, Crocus nudiflorus, Narcissus pseudo-narcissus, 
Allium vineale, Gagea lutea, Colchicum autwmnale, 
Paris, Alisma ranunculoides, Hordeum silvaticum. 
1789. 
Richard Gough. Camden’s Britannia. Enlarged by the 
latest discovery of R. G. 3 Vols, London. 
(Erysimwm cheiranthoides). 
James Pilkington. Derbyshire, being an account of the 
Geology, Mineralogy, Medicinal Waters, &c. 2 Vols. 
Derby. 8vo. The author states with regard to the list 
of plants that ‘‘ considerable pains have been taken to 
make this part of the work as accurate as possible.” 
The list comprising 540 Phanerogams and Higher 
Cryptogams is in the main reliable; there are included 
in it however a few which are erroneous, and occasion- 
ally the same species is recorded more than once under 
different names; if these are subtracted, as well as the 
68 species already mentioned, we have a net list from 
Pilkington of 458, too lengthy to give here. 
