
By Thomas Bruges Flower, Esq. 195 
2. South Middle District, Westbury Downs, Battlesbury Camp, 
near Warminster. ‘Warminster and Cherverell Downs,” Mr. 
C. E. Broome. 
3. South Middle District,“ Whitesheet-hill. ‘Homington and 
Harnham Hill.” Mr. James Hussey. 
North Division. 
5. North-east District, Slopes of Roundway Hill, Devizes. Hed- 
dington Hill near Calne. “ Rabley Down.” Marib. Nat. Hist. Soe. 
Distributed more or less over the chalk downs of the county. The 
whole plant is clothed with a shaggy, deciduous cottony web, which 
is most dense and permanent on the backs of the leaves, and is 
subject to much variation in size, also in the number of flowers. 
There are specimens in the Sherardian Herbarium with 1, 2, 3, and 
6 flowers on each, and varying in height from 8 to 7 or 8 inches. 
Sus-Orper II. CyNAROcEPHALE. 
Flowers all tubular. Style swollen below its branches. In- 
volucre imbricate in all our genera. 
Cartina, (Liny.) Cartine THISTLE. 
Linn. Cl. xix. Ord. i. 
Name. Said to be a corruption of Carolina, so called after 
Charlemagne, who is said to have preserved his army from the 
ravages of the plague by the use of the root of this plant. 
1. ©. culgaris, (Linn.) common Carline Thistle. Engl. Bot. t. 
1144. 
Locality. On the Downs, also in dry sandy and gravelly places. 
B. Fi. July, October. Area, 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Generally distributed, 
The presence of the Carline Thistle indicates a very poor soil ; 
it particularly infests dry sandy pastures. 
Arcrium, (Linn.) Burpock. 
Linn. Cl. xix. Ord. 1. 
Name. From arktos, a bear; in allusion to the roughness of its 
globular heads. Dr. Prior informs us that the plant is called dock 
as many others are, from its large leaves, but why bur is uncertain. 
«1A. majus, (Schk.) Greater Burdock. Reich. Icones, xv., ¢t. 812. 
Bab. Ann. Nat. Hist. ser. iii., vol. xv. p. 9. 
VoL. x.—NO. XXIX. ré) 
. 
