58 



CE. fluviatllk. — "In the Canal behveen Bath and Bradford." 



T. B. Flower. Thought l^y Beutham to be only a variety 

 of GH. phellandrium. 



* HeracJeum giganteum. — " Naturalized on the banks of the Great 



Western Railway at Keynsham." T. B. Flower. 



* Coriandmm sativum. — Found by Mr. Broome and myself in a 



field of mangold near the monument on Lansdown, Sept., 

 1858. Probably introduced with seed. In Warner's 

 first list of Bath plants, Mr. Sole gives this species as 

 growing on " waste places about Dolemead, Bath." It is 

 not mentioned in the " Flora Bathoniensis." 



t Aspenda arvensis. — Fields, Limpley Stoke. Miss Peacock. 

 Perhaps introduced with seed. 



Valeriana samhucifolia. — " Damp places in the neighbourhood of 

 Bath." T. B. Flower. Only a variety of V. officinalis 

 according to -Bentham. 



* Dipsacus fullonum, — " By the side of the river at Keynsham ; 



not wild." T. B. Floiver. 

 Anthemis arvensis. — On walls near Winsley; also near South 



Wraxall. 

 Gnaphalium sylvaticum. — " Between Box and ^larshfield." T. B. 



Flower. 

 Hieracinm murorum, Var. maculahim. — In quarries and on walls 



about Combe Down, as well as in the woods at Prior 



Park, but not considered by Bentham as distinct from 



H. sylvaticum. 

 Utricularia vulgaris. — " In the canal between Bathampton and 



Limpley Stoke." T. B. Floiver. 



* Cuscida epiliuum. — " On flax, at South Wraxall and Winsley." 



T. B. Flower. 



* C. trifolii. — Clover fields, Batheaston. This and the last 



species probably introduced wiCli seed. 

 t Mentha viridis. — Sides of a stream in a meadow between South 

 Stoke and Midford 



