260 PLANTS FOUND NEAR SETTLE. 
Chrysosplenium alternifolium. Not uncommon about Settle. 
Chrysosplenium oppositifolium. Not uncommon about Settle. 
Saxifraga umbrosa. 1n a shady place under a rock, by the side 
of the rivulet in Hesleden Gill, about a quarter of a mile 
from the house. June 30, 1806. (It was previously seen 
here by Bingley.) 
Saxifraga oppositifolia. Rocks on the north side of Ingle- 
borough, with Saxifraga aizoides; also on the west side, a 
little above Foal-foot. On the north-east of Penyghent, on 
almost every rock ; plentifully. 
Saxifraga aizoides. Plentifully on the middle rocks on the north 
side of Ingleborough, as observed here by Ray, as well as 
S. aizoides. 
Sazxifraga granulata. Not uncommon about Settle, as on High-. 
hill, and under walls on the road to Malham. Lord’s 
Wood, Top of the Banks, etc. 
Saxifraga tridactylites. Common on walls and in some pastures. 
Saxifraga hypnoides. On many of the mountaimous pastures 
about Settle, as Giggleswick Scar, Richardson’s Scar, 
Moughton, Highhill, Lord’s Woods, Banks, ete. 
Saxifraga hypnoides, var. palmata? North side of Moss, at the 
end of Malham Tarn. 
Saponaria officinalis. Giggleswick School-yard. In a small field 
by Mitchell Lane. 
Silene inflata. In a few places about Settle. 
Stellaria nemorum. Trow Gill, at the top of Clabdale Woods, be- 
twixt Clapham and Ingleborough. Holling-hall Woods. 
Stellaria graminea. On the edge of Giggleswick Tarn, ete. 
Stellaria uliginosa. Near Giggleswick Tarn. Boggy places at 
the foot of the Crags. Settle Brows. 
Mehringia trinervis. Roadside near Catteral Hall. Near the 
wall-side, at the top of Kendal’s Gill. 
Arenaria serpyllifolia, Highhill Lane. Kelkowe. Waste ground 
below Birkbeck’s Weir, ete. 
Alsine verna. On the Banks above Settle. Middle Highhill. By 
the road to Cowside. By the calamine or lead-mines be- 
tween Settle and Malham, plentifully. 
Alsine verna, var. B, A. Gerardi, or laricifolia of With.? Field 
between Stackhouse-Borrins and Feizor. 
Sedum sexangulare. In 1801 I found specimens of what I con- 
