PLANTS FOUND NEAR SETTLE. 263 
Actea spicata. Clefts of rocks at the foot of Ingleborough ; plen- 
tifully. Also in Hesleden Gill, near Penyghent. Rocks be- 
tween Arncliffe and Darnbrook. Rocks between Chapel-in- 
the-Dale and Meer Gill. A few plants at the side of the 
brook below Malham Cove. 
Nuphar lutea. In some parts of the River Ribble between Settle 
and Long Preston. 
Nymphea alba. Giggleswick Tarn. 
Helianthemum vulgare. Kelkowe. Lord’s Wood, etc. 
Aquilegia vulgaris. Kelkowe. Stainforth Scars. 
Anemone nemorosa. Mill Island, etc. 
Thalictrum minus. Giggleswick Scar. Richardson’s Sear. Gor- 
dale, etc., as noticed in Ray’s time. 
Thalictrum flavum. Banks of the Ribble, between Settle and 
Stackhouse. ast-field Wood, near Arncliffe. 
Thalictrum majus. Arnforth Wood, near Long Preston, Mr. T. 
Nutéall.* On the banks of the Wenning, between Settle and 
Horaby, Mr. W. Kenyon. 
Ranunculus auricomus. Kendal’s Gill. Kelkowe, etc. 
Trollius europeus. In several places near Settle, as in Mill Is- 
land. The banks of the Ribble, etc. 
Helleborus fetidus. Feizor, and near the old Tan-pits at Lang- 
cliffe. 
Mentha viridis. Side of Giggleswick Beck. Roadside near 
Rathmell. 
Mentha viridis, var. 5 (?) of Smith. Near the further Penyghent 
House. 
Mentha piperita. Right-hand side of the road near Beggar-wife’s 
Bridge, going from Giggleswick, and by the side of Giggles- 
wick Beck. Roadside in Airton. 
Mentha hirsuta (aquatica of Babington). Settle Ings. 
* Mr. Thomas Nuttall, F.L.S., a native of Long Preston, near Settle, one of my 
earliest friends and associates in botanical rambles in our native neighbourhood, is 
well known for his numerous contributions to the knowledge of the natural history, 
and especially the botany, of America, where he afterwards spent the best part of 
his life, but he has a few years since returned to England, residing now at Nutgrove, 
between Manchester and Liverpool, where he has an extensive garden and collection 
of living plants. 
