128 YORKSHIRE NATURALISTS' UNION. 



57. Chelidonium majus. Greater celandine. Old walls 



and waste ground, rare. Walls of Fountains Abbey, 

 not plentiful ; also at Hackfacll (Mrs. Berkeley). 



58. Corydalis lutea. Yellow fumitory. Fountains Abbey 



and Hall, scarcely wild ; also at Swinton (Mrs. 

 Berkeley). 



59. C. claviculata. White climbing fumitory. Thickets, 



not common. Plumpton rocks, near Knaresborough ; 



Hookstone Crags, Knaresborough (Baines). 

 62. Fumaria muralis. One plant on a rubbish heap near 



Bishopton (1880). 

 64. F. officinalis. Common fumitory. Cornfields and 



waste ground, abundant. 

 69. Raphanus Raphanistrum. Wild radish. Cornfields 



and waste ground, not uncommon. 

 71. Sinapis arvensis. Charlock. Cultivated ground, 



very common. 

 76. Brassica Napus. Rape. An occasional escape from 



cultivation. 

 78. B. Rapa. Turnip. Ditto. River sides and cultivated 



land. 

 83. Sisymbrium officinale. Hedge mustard. Hedges 



and waste land, common. 

 86. S. Alliaria. Hedge garlic. Waste ground and hedge- 

 banks, very common. 

 88. Hesperis matronaiis. Dame's violet. Said by Baines 



not to be rare on waste ground near Ripon, but it 



does not seem to occur now. 

 91. Cheiranthus Cheiri. Wall-flower. Rocks and old 



ruins. Knaresborough, on rocks (Mrs. Berkeley). 



93. Cardamine amara. Large - flowered bitter - cress. 



Marshes, uncommon. Sharow mires ; Gormire and 

 Thirsk (Baines). 



94. C. pratensis. Cuckoo-flower. Common everywhere in 



damp places. 



Trans Y N -U- 1882 (oub. 1883). Series E 



