cruciferj:. 39- 



59. D. verna, L. Whitlow Grass. 



Paronychia vulgaris, Bod. (Ger.). 

 Cyb. Br. i. 133 ; iii. 382 ; Comp. 97. Curt. F. L. f. 1. 



Wall-tops and dry ground ; common. A. March — May. 

 I. Wood Hall, Pinner, in a ploughed field. Harefield ; Blackst. Fuse. 72. 

 II. Teddington (in flower Jan. 3, 1854) ; Phi/t. N. 8. ii. 279. Eoad bet. 

 Staines and Hampton. 



III. Isleworth, &c., abundant. 



IV. Neasdon ; Kingsbury ; Cole. Bet. Whetstone and Totteridge. Hamp- 



stead Heath ; Johns. Enum. Stanmore. 

 V. Horsington ; Meltnll, 8. Greenford ; Herb. Young, Osterley Park 

 walls ; Masters, Turnham Green. 

 VI. Muswell Hill ; Cole. Edmonton. Enfield. 



VII. [Plentifully on the brick wall in Chauncerie Lane, belonging to the 

 Earl of Southampton ; Ger. 500.] Marylebone, 1827; Varenne, 

 Kensal Green Cemetery. Haverstock Hill. 



First record : Gerarde, 1597 ; also the first notice as British. 



[COCHLEABIA, Linn, 



fiO. C. angrlica, L. Scurvy Grass. 



Cyb. Br. i. 128; iii. 381 ; Comp. 97. Syme E. B. i. t. 133. 



VII. Isle of Dogs ; Mart. App. P. C. 65. 



It does not now grow on the Middlesex shore, though abundant on both 

 sides of the Thames as high as Woolwich, and occurring also near 

 Greenwich (opposite the above locality), whence the specimen from 

 which Syme's figure was drawn was obtained.] 



ARMORACIA, Eupp. 



61. *A. rusticana, Eupp. Cochlearia Armoracia, L. (Syme). 

 Horse Eadish. 

 Eaphanus rusticanus (Ger.). 

 Cyb. Br. i. 129 ; iii. 381. Syme E. B. i. t. 129. 



Railway banks, waste places, sides of fields and ditches ; common. P. 



May — July. 

 I. Stanmore Heath. Pinner Chalk-pits. Uxbridge ! ; Harefield ! ; Newb. 

 II. Staines, abundant. 



III. About Isleworth, common. Hounslow. Grove Boad, Harrow. 



IV. Peterboroiigh Road, Harrow ; Melvill, 8. 



V. Side of stream, Apperton ; Melvill, 8. Horsington Hill. Brentford. 



Ealing ! ; Newb. Acton ; Tucker. 

 VI. Colney Hatch. Church fields, Edmonton. 



VII. Bishop's Walk, Fulham ; Britten. [At a small village called Hogs- 

 don ( = Hoxton), in the field next to a farm-house leading to 



