150 



near Gormiie lake, June, 1844 ; 

 W. Borrer, Esq. 

 **uliginosum, B, et S. Heslington 

 fields, near York. Abundant on the 

 eastern coast, where it has been 

 seen by myself and Mr. Ibbotson, 

 at points 20 miles asunder, often 

 growing half covered with the sand 

 of the sea-shore. On tufa under 

 the New River Bridge at Castle 

 Howard. 

 Wahlenbergii, Schwgr. {Br. albicans, 



Eng. Fl.) 

 Zierii, Dicks. Teesdale. 

 Campylopus {Grimmia, Eng. Fl.) 



saxicola, Brid. Merrick's Gill, Hack- 

 ness. 

 Catoscopidm {Weissia, Eng. Fl.) 



*nigritum, Brid. In the second field 

 from the Tees, between Whey-syke 

 house and Harewood Bourn ; Mr. 

 R. B. Bowman. 

 Cephalogonium {Dicratium, Eng. Fl.) 



Jlexuosum, B. et S. 

 Ceratodon {Didymodon, Eng. Fl.) 

 purpureus, Brid. 



CiNCLIDOTUS. 



fontinaloides. Pal. Beauv. 

 Climacium {Hj/pnum, Eng. Fl.) 



dendroides, W. et M. 

 Daltonia. 



heteromalla, H. etT. Eskdale. Castle- 

 Howard. 



DiCRANUM. 



Bruntoni, Sm. {Didymodon, Eng, Fl.) 



cerviculatum, Hedw. 



denticulatum, B. et S. {Weissia stri- 

 ata /3. major, Muse. Brit.) Green's 

 C lough, Cliviger, Todmorden ; Mr. 

 Nowell. 



Dillenii, Tayl. {D. scoparium and vul- 

 gare, Eng. Fl.) 



Jlavescens, Sm. 



*fugax, B. et S. {Weissia striata a. 

 minor, Eng. Fl.) Wharfedale. 



*fuscescens,TiuTQ. Teesdale. 



glaucum, Hedw. 



heteromallum, Hedw. 



pellucidum, Sw. 



rxifescens. Turn. Castle-Howard park- 

 quarry. 



*Schrebe)-i, Hedw. Ditch on the W. 

 side of the Temple Rush, Castle- 

 Howard. 



scoparium, Hedw. 



spurium, Hedw. Discovered on Barm- 

 by Moor above 70 years ago, by Mr. 

 Teesdale, and figured in Eng. Bo- 

 tany from that locality. It still 

 grows there, and fruits sparingly. 

 In a barren state I have found it 

 also on Stockton Forest and Lang- 

 with Moor. 



squarrosum,, Schrad. 



*Starkii,\, W. et M. ? Holwick Scarr, 

 Teesdale. 



f This is the " D. strumiferum " of my Teesdale list, and was so named from a 

 specimen given me by Dr. Taylor, purporting to be a portion of the original specimen 

 described in ' Muscologia Britannica ;' but having since had an opportunity of com- 

 paring it with the example of D. strumiferum in Moug. and Nestler, I am satisfied 

 that it is a very different species. Mr. Wilson refers it to D. Starkii, and perhaps 

 correctly ; it differs, however, from all the specimens of D. Starkii in my possession 

 in the following particulars. Leaves patent or subsecund, concavo-canaliculate, subu- 

 late or subulato-setaceous from a lanceolate base (subulate in the other), of a darker 

 colour, the nerve rather stronger, and in the uppermost leaves continued beyond the 

 pagina ; those of the perichaetium tapering more suddenly into longer and more rigid 

 points. The male inflorescence consists of gemmae dispersed along the stem, in the 

 axils of the leaves, while in D. Starkii they are seated at the base of the female flower. 

 Pedicel stouter. Capsule wider, the outer paries less delicate. Operculum with a 

 longer beak. Teeth less deeply cloven, and crura shorter. 



