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THE FLORA 

 OF KIPON AND NEIGHBOURHOOD. 



By 

 REV. HENRY H. SLATER, M.A., F.Z.S., M.B.O.U., 



Vice-President of the Yorkshire Naturalists' Union, 

 Member of the Botanical Record Club, etc. 



The writer acknowledges with gratitude the assistance he 

 has received from many brother — and sister — Botanists, so many 

 that he will not attempt to give a list of them here, but will 

 content himself by appending their names, as authority, to their 

 information. Where no name occurs after a locality given for 

 a plant, the writer wishes it to be understood to be the result 

 of his own experience, whether previously recorded by others 

 or not. 



Careful work will doubtless reveal many other species, 

 especially amongst the Rosce, RuM, Salices, Gramina, Chenopo- 

 diacecB, and Polygonacece, which the writer confesses to have 

 somewhat neglected, mostly from a lack of the standard 

 literature on the subject. 



The Latin names and the numbers which precede them 

 refer to the London Catalogue of Plants, Eighth Edition (1877). 



THALAMIFLOR^. 



4A. Thalictrum majus. Greater meadow-rue. Dry banks 



and thickets. Wicliffe Lane ; Mackershaw Wood. 



Not abundant. 

 6b. T. flavum. Common meadow-rue. Damp places, 



not abundant. Sharow Mires. 

 7. Anemone Pulsatilla. Pasque flower. Calcareous 



pastures. Near North Stainley, rare (Rev. R. A. 



Summerfield). 



