126 YORKSHIRE NATURALISTS' UNION. 



8. A. nemorosa. Wood anemone. Woods and hedges, 

 abundant. 



11. Myosurus minimus. Mousetail. Gravelly fields. 



Staveley, near Knaresborough (Baines). 



12. Ranunculus circinatus. Pools and still waters. The 



Canal (Miss Morton). 

 14A. R. truncatus. Pools and ditches. Pillmoor Carr, near 



Sharow, etc. 

 14B. R. floribundus. Not uncommon in ponds. 



16, R. Drouetii. Drouet's ranunculus. Ponds, etc. Queen 

 Mary's Dubb ; small pond near North Bridge, etc. 



21. R. hederaceus. Ivy-leaved water crowfoot. Ditches 



and streams, not uncommon. 



22. R. sceleratus. Celery-leaved crowfoot. Marshes and 



wet places, not common. Near Hewick Bridge. 



24. R. Flammula. Lesser spear-wort. Wet places, common. 



26. R. Lingua. Greater spear-wort. Marshes, uncommon. 



Sharow Mires ; Marfield, Masham. Near Copgrove 

 (Baines). 



27. R. auricomus. Wood crowfoot. Woods, not uncom- 



mon. Clotherholme ; Mackershaw ; Studley, etc. 



28. R. acris. Buttercup. Fields, abundant. 



29. R. repens. Creeping buttercup. Fields and woods, 



common. 



30. R. bulbosus. Bulbous buttercup. Grass land, very 



common. 



34. R. arvensis. Corn crowfoot. Cornfields, a colonist. 



Near canal (Miss Morton). So plentiful in some 

 cornfields near Markington, in 1881, as to give them 

 a bright yellow colour. 



35. R. Ficaria. Lesser celandine. Everywhere common. 



36. Caltha palustris. Marsh marigold. Common in all 



wet places. 



Trans.Y.N.U., 1882 (pub. 1883). Series E 



