•234 55. LAMIACEiE. 



these two alleged species in a satisfactory mannei" ; and 

 there can be no doubt that many of the localities recorded 

 for S. pratensis must be referred hither, on account of mis- 

 takes between S. pratensis and S . verbenaca. The Rev. 

 G. Gordon records the occuiTence of this plant " between 

 the Episcopal Chapel and Harbour, Fortrose, 1831" (Coll. 

 Mor. 2.), but marks it as having been " certainly intro- 

 duced." Proceeding southwards, we find a single locality 

 at Dundee, given in the Flora of Forfarshire, qualified by 

 a remark that it is there " probably the outcast of a gar- 

 den." In the Catalogue of the Edinburgh Society, S. 

 verbenaca is recognized as indigenous in the counties of 

 the Forth, where it was recorded by Lightfoot and others. 

 Babington localizes S. clandestina only on the " Lizard 

 Point, Cornwall." 



800. Salvia pratensis, Linn. >*« ^^-/T/ A^jrif 



Ai-ea [1 2] 3 [4 5 6 7 8 * 10 11]. 



South limit in Kent. 



North limit in Oxford. 



Estimate of provinces 1. Estimate of counties 2. 



Latitude 51 — 52. Local (Germ.) type of distribution. 



Agrarian region. Inferagrarian zone. 



Descends nearly to the coast level. 



Ascends to 50 yards, more or less. 



Range of mean annual temperatm-e 49 — 48. 



Denizen. Pascual .'' This species has long been col- 

 lected in abundance, although very locally, near Cobham, 

 in Kent ; and Mr. C. C. Babington informs me that he 

 possesses a specimen from the neighbourhood of Middleton 

 Stoney, in Oxfordshire ; the latter probably being the loca- 

 lity particularly described by Mr. Saunders in the Mag. 



