614 ADDITIONAL NOTES, ETC. 



1081. Allium arenarium, vol. ii. p. 453. 



" By Allium ' arenarium ' (Linn.) Fries means our A. 

 vineale (Nov. Suec. p. 84)." Mr. Borrer, in Bot. Gaz. ii. 

 p. 99. (See also Bot. Gaz. ii. p. 9). 



1083. Allium vineale, vol. ii. p. 454. 



Add province 9 in the area, on authority of Mr. J. Har- 

 rison, quoted in Dickinson's Flora of Liverpool. The 

 south limit extends to Cornwall, on authority of Mr. 

 Pascoe. 



1084. Allium sph<srocephalum, vol. ii. p. 454. 



Erase " 1 or " from the area, and " Somerset or " from 

 the south limit ; Mr. Borrer informing me that the station 

 is on the Gloucestershire side of the Avon. 



1094. Muscari racemosum, vol. ii. p. 461. 



" I am fully persuaded Muscari racemosum is a genuine 

 native of the East of England." Dr. Bromfield, in Phytolo- 

 gist, iii. p. 967, with more extended remarks on the claims 

 of the plant to he so considered. 



1095. Anthericum serotinum, vol. ii. p. 461. 



Still to he found on Clogwyn ddu, or Clogwyn dur 

 Arddu, a precipice of Snowdon, probably upwards of 800 

 yards above the sea. The Eev. T. Butler sent specimens 

 thence to the Botanical Society of London. I do not 

 know the exact situation of Mr. John Ball's station " on 

 rocks above the copper-mine near Llyndd," mentioned in 

 Bot. Gaz. iii. p. 69. 



1098. Convalla,ria bifolia, vol. ii. p. 465. 



" I have seen it at Caen Wood, in a part of the park 

 said never to have been cleared from the aboriginal forest, 

 but only in one very large patch. Another patch had 

 been destroyed (or was, at least, not to be found when I 

 was there) by the recent leading of a made walls through 

 it, as the gardener told me." Mr. Borrer, in Bot. Gaz. ii. 

 p. 99. (See also Bot. Gaz. i. p. 319). 



