138 YORKSHIRE NATURALISTS' UNION. 



361 V. sylvatica. Wood vetch. Woods, rare. Old wood 



near Hutton Moor (Rev. J. Dalton). 

 362. V. sepium. Bush vetch. Woods and hedges, com- 

 mon. 

 364. V. sativa. Common tare. A common escape from 



cultivation. 

 365A. V. angustifolia. Narrow-leaved vetch. Waste ground 



and dry places, occasional. Sharow. 

 366. V. lathyroides. Spring vetch. Reported to grow at 



Mickley Barrows (or Burrows). 

 371. Lathyrus pratensis. Meadow vetchling. Fields and 



roadsides, abundant. 

 376. Orobus tuberosus. Bitter vetch. Woods and rocky 



places, common. 

 378. Prunus spinosa. Blackthorn. Woods and hedges, 



abundant. 

 381. P. Avium. Wild cherry. Woods and hedgerows, often 



planted. 

 383. P. Padus. Bird cherry. Woods in hilly districts. Hack- 

 fall ; Tanfield. 



385. Spiraea ulmaria. Meadow-sweet. Woods and damp 



fields, abundant. 



386. S. Filipendula. Drop-wort. Dry banks on calcareous 



soil. Used to be pretty common by the R. Ure near 

 Ripon, but is now getting very rare. Near Copt 

 Hewick (J. S. Hurst). 



387. Agrimonia Eupatoria. Agrimony. Fields and hedge- 



banks, common. 



389. Sanguisorba officinalis. Burnet. Fields, especially 



in hilly districts, common. 



390. Poterium Sanguisorba. Salad burnet. Fields, 



common. 



392. Alchemilla arvensis. Parsley piert. Dry gravelly 



fields, abundant. 



393. A. vulgaris. Lady's mantle. Fields, common. 



Trans. Y.N.U., 1882 (pub. 1884). Series E 



