BOTANY 



Rubus mucronatus, Blox. 



anglosaxonicus, Gelert. 



Borreri, Bell Salt, var. den- 



tatifolius, Briggt 



echinatus, Lindl. 



longithyrsiger, Bab. 



plinthostylus, Genev. 



hirtus, W. y K. 



Balfourianus, Blox. 

 Alchemilla vulgaris, Linn. 

 Agrimonia odorata, Mill. 

 Rosa obtusifolia, Desv. 



stylosa, Desv. 

 Pyrus torminalis, Ehrh. 



rotundifolia, Becbst. 



germanica, Hook. fit. 

 Bryonia dioica, Jac q. 

 Eryngium maritimum, Linn. 



campestre, Linn. 

 Physospermum commutatum, 



Spreng. 



Sison Amomum, Linn. 

 Pimpinella major, H uds. 

 Adoxa Moschatellina, Linn. 

 Sambucus Ebulus, Linn. 

 Valeriana Mikanii, Willd. 

 Valerianella carinata, Loisel. 



rimosi, Bast. 

 Scabiosa Columbaria, Linn. 

 Aster Tripolium, Linn. 

 Erigeron acre, Linn. 

 Inula crithmoides, Linn. 

 Anthemis arvensis, Linn. 

 Matricaria Chamomilla, Linn. 

 Senecio erucifolius, Linn. 

 Arctium majus, Bernh. 

 Cnicus pratensis, Willd. 



acaulis, Willd. 



Mariana lactea, Hill. 

 Crepis taraxacifolia, Ihuill. 



biennis, Linn. 

 Hieracium aurantiacum, Linn. 



rigidum, Hartm. 

 Tragopogon pratense, Linn. 

 Campanula rotundifolia, Linn. 

 Statice auriculzfolia, Vabl. 

 Primula veris, Linn. 

 Anagallis caerulea, Schreb. 

 Blackstonia perfoliata, liuds. 

 Gentiana Amarella, Linn. 



campestris, Linn. 

 Verbascum Blattaria, Linn. 

 Sibthorpia europaea, Linn. 

 Bartsia viscosa, Linn. 

 Orobanche major, Linn. 



minor, Sm. 

 Pinguicula lusitanica, Linn. 

 Nepeta Cataria, Linn. 

 Melittis Melissophyllum, Linn. 

 Leonurus Cardiaca, Linn. 

 Chenopodium polyspermum, Linn. 



murale, Linn. 

 Polygonum minus, Huds. 



Bistorta, Linn. 

 Fagopyrum esculcntum, Maench 

 Daphne Laureola, Linn. 

 Euphorbia Paralias, Linn. 



portlandica, Linn. 

 Elodea canadensis, Micbx. 

 Neottia Nidus-avis, Rich. 

 Epipactis latifolia, All. 

 Orchis incarnata, Linn. 

 Ruscus aculeatus, Linn. 

 Polygonatum multiflorum, All. 

 Convallaria majalis, Linn. 



2. LOWER TAMAR DISTRICT 



Allium Ampebprasum, Linn., var. 



Babingtonii (Sort:) 

 Scilla autumnalis, Linn. 



verna, Huds. 

 Ornithogalum umbellatum, Linn. 

 Typha latifolia, Linn. 

 Potamogeton crispus, Linn. 

 Zostera marina, Linn. 

 Scirpus sylvaticus, Linn. 

 Eriophorum vaginatum, Linn. 



latifolium, Hoppe. 

 Rynchospora alba, Vahl. 

 Carex pallescens, Linn. 



distans, Linn. 



fulva, Good. 

 Setaria viridis, Beauv. 

 Alopecurus myosuroides, Huds. 

 Phleum arenarium, Linn. 

 Gastridium australe, Beauv. 

 Koeleria cristata, Pers. 

 Glyceria plicata, Fr. 



maritima, Mert. & Koch. 

 Festuca sylvatica, Vitt. 

 Lolium temulentum, Linn. 

 Lepturus filiformis, Trin, 

 Hymenophyllum tunbridgense, Sm. 



unilaterale, Bory. 

 Asplenium lanceolatum, Huds. 

 Ceterach officinarum, Willd. 

 Cystopteris fragilis, Bernh. 

 Phegopteris Dryopteris, fee 

 Ophioglossum vulgatum, Linn. 

 Botrychium Lunaria, Sw. 

 Lycopodium clavatum, Linn. 

 Chara fragilis, Desv. 



Nitella flexilis, Agardb 



opaca, Agardb 



On the east this division is bounded by Devon, on the south by the English Channel, on 

 the west by the several roads running from Downderry to Trenodden, Pengover Green, Way- 

 land, Upton and Kenwood. A little beyond the latter place the line passes across Twelve 

 Men's and East Moors and joins the Bodmin-Launceston road above Cannaframe. Its 

 northern boundary is the Upper Tamar District. 



The exquisite beauty of this section of the county is too well known to call for lengthy 

 notice here. Its valleys and glens court comparison with the best in the west of England ; its 

 parks are almost unrivalled, Mount Edgcumbe, Antony, Port Eliot, Pentillie and Trebartha 

 Hall being but a few of the beauty-spots. The only elevations of any significance are Kit 

 Hill, 1,088 feet, and Trebartha Tor, 1,029 ^ eet - From their summits extensive views may 

 be had of a softly undulating country made up of a mosaic of sylvan, moorland, and up- 

 land wealth peculiar to that portion of Cornwall lying south of the backbone. The 

 valleys through which the Tamar, Lynher and Tidy have cut their way are deep and 

 well wooded, in many places remarkably sinuous and with precipitous banks. In its eastern 

 part this division is drained by the Tamar and its tributary the Inny, and in the west by the 

 Lynher and Tidy, both of which rise just within the border-line. Between the Lynher and 

 the Tamar there is a good deal of hilly country stretching from below Callington to Lewan- 

 nick on the fringe of the Upper Tamar District. From the foot of these hills proceed the 

 numerous feeders of the Lynher. From Pensilva to Cannaframe the upper portion of the western 

 division-line crosses a wild part of the eastern escarpment of the Bodmin Moors, amid such 

 elevations as the Caradon Hills and Smallacoombe Downs on the one side and Hawks Tor 

 and Trebartha Tor on the other. 



Launceston stands on a continuation of the Upper Devonian rocks noticed when dealing 



1 57 8 



