206. 
APPENDIX C.—HERBARIUM BRITANNICUM. 179 
leaf only is somewhat narrower at its base; and when ciliated, 
the hairs are pointed forwards in the growing plant. I find, 
on examination, that the hairs of the Myosotis sedattnd when 
ant is dried, are bent in various directio This 
the pl 
beautiful plant adorns the rocks on the summit of esi Lawers, 
producing its flowers during the greater part of the summer. 
[The first published record for Britain of the plant now 
known as Myosotis alpestris, Schmidt.—G. C. D.] 
Pulmonaria maritima, ene: Bot, -4. 9685. Curt. fL.Lond.,, 
fast. Ot 28s Sen Lungwor 
On the sea-coast, as at net ii and near Auchmithie, 
both in Angusshir re, and near [St.] Johnshaven, in the shire of 
the Mearns, plentifully, as also a variety with green leaves. 
ES aig eda maritima, Hill; Mertensta maritima, S. F. Gray. 
7D] 
. Chzrophyllum aureum, Zug. Bot., ¢. he eee Golden 
Cow Parsley or Cow- weed. Golden Cherv 
I discovered this rare plant, several years ago, by the sides 
of corn-fields between Montrose and Arbroath. I afterwards 
Edinburgh. I observed what I believe to be an intermediate 
plant between this and the i aa hace oe near the 
village of Kirkliston, about ten miles we m Edinburgh. 
Not a British species, and now gate lost in all the 
localities.—G. C. D.] 
. Scheuchzeria palustris, Zug. Bot., t. 7807! Marsh Scheuch- 
ush, 
zeria, or Lesser Flowering 
I have to acknowledge my obligation to the Rev. J. Dalton 
at Copegrove, near Knaresborough, Yorkshire, who collected 
excellent specimens of itin a mars sh near We ther ery, in that 
county, and kindly communicated the same to m 
[See Journ. Bot. 167 (1903).—G. C. D.] 
. Vaccinium oxycoccus, Eng. Bol, ¢. 379; Fl. Dan., ¢. So. 
Cranberry. 
I have again to acknowledge my obligations to Miss Eleanora 
Sampbel for excellent specimens of this plant collected by her 
near Kilbryde, within three miles of Dunblan oh in Perthshire. 
I have seen this plant in the neighbourhood of Forfar, and near 
Loch Brandy in the Clova mountains; but it is not common 
on the Highland mountains. I have seen it also near Loch 
Katrine. It is not rare in the South of Scotland or the North 
of England. 
[Oxycoccus quadry, ees Gilib.=O. palustris, Pers., Schollera 
-C.D.] 
Oxycoccus, Roth.— 
