1859.] PLANTS OF PERTH, 37 



Festuca rubra. Passim. 



Filago germanica. Waste ground, Kinnoul Hill ; most luxuriant 



and frequent. Crieflf roadside, three miles west of Perth ; 



sparingly. 

 Filago minima. Craigie Moor ; sparingly. P. 

 Fragaria vesca. Woods of Kinnoul and Scone ; abundant. 

 Fumaria capreolata. In a hedge near Kinfauns toll ; rare. 

 Galeopsis Tetrahit and versicolor. Plentiful in cornfields. 

 Galium boreale. Plentiful and luxuriant^ banks of Tay, by 



North Inch. 

 Galium cruciatum. Frequent around Perth. 

 Galium uliginosum. Marshes, banks of Tay ; frequent. 

 Geranium phaum. Wood of Scone ; rare. Near Barnhill, but 



undoubtedly an outcast from a garden. 

 Geranium pratense. Right bank of Tay, top of North Inch. 



Near Friartown, and banks of Almond, above " Auld Brig." 

 Geranium pyrenaicum. Near Barnhill, K. ; plentiful. 

 Geranium sanguineum. Same locality as Doronicum Pardali- 



anches. Most luxuriant stems, six feet in length. — A stunted 



variety occurs on the rocks on Kinnoul Hill. 

 Geranium sylvaticum. Same locality as G. sanguineum (islet in 



Tay), but more plentiful. Woods of Dunkeld; abundant. 

 Geum intermedium. In the wood of Quarry Mill Den, along 



with G. rivale, but not G. urbanum ; frequent. 

 Geum 7'ivale. Luxuriant and abundant in woods, particularly 



that of Quarry Mill Den, S. 

 Glechoma hederacea. Bather local, and not plentiful anywhere 



that I have seen in this district. 

 Glyceria aquatica. Near Friartown ; abundant. P. 

 ^Gnaphalium sylvaticum. Hill of Kinnoul. 

 Helianthemum vulgare. Craigie Moor and Cherrybank, P. Kin- 

 noul Hill, K. Plentiful in all these localities. 

 Helleborus foetidus. Quarry Mill Den Wood ; not plentiful, but 



undoubtedly wild, though often branded with an asterisk in 



our British Floras. 

 Heleocharis (or more commonly spelt Eleocharis) palustris. 



Abundant. Banks of Tay, and elsewhere. 

 ^Heleocharis ccespitosus. Moor of Durdie, four miles east from 



Perth. 

 Hesperis matronalis. In the deep, rocky ravines of Kinnoul 



