NEW OR EARS PLANTS. 89 



Botanist's Guide, have been eradicated from the assigned stations by build- 

 ing and alterations. A Flora Metropolitans, to exhibit the actual botany 

 of the country round London, would be a valuable addition to our local floras. 

 But the Collecting -Box, not the Library, must give the materials for drawing 

 up sach. 



•Anemone apennina. Near Harrow on the Hill. B. G. 



Mvosurtjs minimus. Meadows behind the chapel, and in a lane that goes 



from Copenhagen House to Kentish Town; Mary-le-Bone Park; 



Islington; Paddington; Pancras ; Edmonton, if. 6'. 

 &AKVXCXJLva parvijhrus. Hackney, Kentish Town, andfseveral places about 



London. B. G. 

 f Adonis autttmnalis. Among the com at Acton; frequent about London. 



B.G. 

 IHelleborus viridis. Near Harefield. Eng. Fl. Down Bam Hill, near 



Harrow ; in a small wood near Finchley. B. G. 

 •C'amelixa sativa. Road-side at Stoke Newington; Highgate; Tsle of 



Dogs. B. G. 

 Cochlearia anglica. Isle of Dogs. B. G. 



Teusdalia nudicaulus. Near Hampton Court, and other places about Lon- 

 don. B. G. 

 Dextaria bulbifera. In the Old Park Wood, r near Harefield, abundantly. 



Eng. Fl. 

 *Draba muralis. About Chelsea, probably from gardens. Br. Fl. 

 Cardamine amara. Riverside at Harefield, and about Uxbridge, plenti- 

 fully; banks of the Thames between Kew and Mortlake; at 



Chelsea ; Isle of Dogs. B. G. 

 • impaliens. " Thames-side, near the Botanic Garden, Chelsea. 



Martyn. There can be little doubt but the following species (C. 



amara) was intended." B. G. 

 Nasturtium syloestre. Tothill Fields, and other low watery situations in 



the vicinity of the Thames. Eng. Fl. 

 SisviruRiCM /Wo. Waltham Greon. (Mr. W. Pamplin.) IF. Christy, sp. 



I found this plant by the direction of the Rev. G. E. Smith, which 



has almost totally disappeared of late about Chelsea, Sac. It grows 

 by some new houses in a lane near Waltham Green Church, near 



Fulham. W. Pamplin, mss. About Chelsea, and the whole neigh- 

 bourhood of London; walls at Bromptou; about Haggerstone ; on 

 a bank opposite Sboreditch Workhouse, &c. B. G. 



NEW OR RARE PLANTS 



WHICH WP. HAVE NOTICED SINCK OCK LAST. 



1. Alstratmeria auranliaca, Orange-flowered. ( Bol. Reg. 1834.) Avery 

 handsome flowering species. The flower stems grow about three feet high, 

 producing heads of numerous flowers. The flowers are of an orange colour 

 spotted with dark. The plant deserves a place in every flower garden. It 

 may be procured of most of the Nurserymen and Florists. It will require a 

 slight protection from the severities of winter, by mulching over the roots, 

 or covering with a hand-glass, &c. Class, Hexandria; order, Monogynia. 

 Natural order, Amaryllidacca-. Alstrameria, from Baron Alstr^emer. 



2. Anchusa versicolor, Changeable flowered Alkanet. (Bot. Mag. 3177.) 

 The plant is a hard annual, a native of the Caucasian Alps, producing nu- 

 merous flowers, which in their early stage are of a rosy-red colour, bat when 

 fully expanded change to a bright blue with a yellow eye, diverging into 

 iinmerouB rays of a whitish yellow colour. Each flower is about two-third* 



VOL. IV. N 



