438 ADDITIONAI, NOTES, ETC. 



or believes that E. alpinum was found by himself on 

 Snowdon. Have the Authors of the British Flora any 

 reason to adduce against the accuracy of the alleged 

 station, that thej^ thus ignore or deny it ? 



378. Circcsa alinna, vol. i. p. 376. 



Province 1 is to be added in the area, on authority of 

 Mr, F. J. A. Hort, who reports this species as found on the 

 limestone debris of Cheddar Cliffs. Dr.W. B. Clark records 

 C. alpina and Lutetiana both common in Freston woods, 

 near Ipswich ; but in support of this improbable habitat 

 for the former, it will be needful to have higher botanical 

 testimony before the ]Drovince of Ousc [4] can be entered 

 in the true area of C. alpina. So frequent, indeed, is the 

 mistake of labelling or reporting the cordate-leaved states 

 of C. Lutetiana as C. alpina, that half of the j)rovinces 

 enumerated in the area may be deemed to require verifica- 

 tion. From personal observation I can testify only to 

 provinces 12, 15, 16. Nor have I seen any specimen of 

 true C. alpina from any of the other provinces on record 

 for it. The C. intermedia has been reported from pro- 

 vinces 8, 10, 14, 15, 16. I suspect that more fi-equently 

 a form of C. Lutetiana, than one of C. alpina, is named C. 

 intermedia. 



379. Hippiiris vulgaris, vol. i. p. 377. 



The south limit may be extended to Cornwall, on the 

 report of the Rev. Mr. Rogers, as given in Bot. Gaz. ii. 

 39, The province of North Wales was erroneously 

 omitted in the area, and stated not to produce this plant, 

 which is enumerated in Welsh Botanology, however, as 

 occurring in Anglesea. Range of temperature 52 — 45, 



380. Myriophyllmn verticillatum, vol. i. p. 377. 



Mr, Pascoe has seen a dried specimen of this species, 

 which was said to have been gathered in Cornwall. Two 



