tlMBELLIFEKJ!. 123 



SISOK, Linn. 



272. S. Amomum, L. 



Sison (Morison). Shun aromaticwn Sison, List. R. H. (Blackst.). 

 Cyb. Br. i. 433 ; Comp. 188. Syme E. B. iv. t. 578. 



Hedges and roadsides ; very common. B. July— September. 

 In all the districts. 

 VII. Ditch-banks round London; Moris. Umb. 15. Marylebone Fields, 

 1815; Herb. G. ^ B. Islington; Herb. Hardw. Kentish Town, 

 abundant. Nea* Hornsey Wood. Kilburn. 



First record: Morison, 1672.* Mr. Watson {Comp. 188) seems to doubt 

 the nativity of this species. 



BUNIUM, BC. 



273. B. flexuosum, L. Earth-Nut. 



Bulbo-castanum et B. altera (Ger.). Bulbocastanum minus, Ger. em. 

 (Blackst). B. majus, Ger. em. (E. Syn. iii.). Nucu!a terrestris 

 septcntrionalium, Lob. (Johns.). Bunium Bulbocastanum, L. (Curtis 

 and others). 



Cyb. Br. i. 435 ; Comp. 189. Curt. F. L. f. 4. 



Fields, heaths and woods ; rather common. P. May — July. 

 I. Harefield ! ; Blackst. Fasc. 12. Pinner and Stanmore Woods,; 

 Melv. 34. 

 IV. Hampstead Heath ! ; Johns. Enum. Harrow Park ; Melv. 34. 

 Bishop's Wood, Hampstead. Near Finchley ! ; Newb. 

 V. Near Brentford ; Hemsley. Chiswick House grounds ; Fox. 

 VI, Field adjoining Highgate ; Ger. 906. Field bet. Hornsey Wood and 

 Old Fall, Mr. Martyn ; R. Syn. iii. 209. Hadley!; Warren. 

 Colney Hatch. Enfield. 

 VII. [Field next the conduit heads by Maribone ; Ger. 906. Near Mari- 

 bone Park; Merrett, 17.] Kensington; Paddington ; Brit. Bhys, 

 Kensington Gardens, abundant, but stunted in growth. 



First record: Gerarde, 1597. The Kensington Gardens plant was 

 recorded by Smith, Fl. Brit. i. 301, as B. Bulbocastanum, L. on the 

 authority of Mr. W. Wood. In B. G. 402, however, is a note stating 

 that the latter botanist was then ' of opinion the plants he gathered 

 ■were only large specimens of B. flexuosum.' See also E. Fl. ii. 55. 

 Marty n's Hornsey plant has been often referred to B. Bulbocastanum 

 (see Cyb. Br. i. 436), and we were at first inclined to consider it 

 that species, though all the places at present known to produce it 

 are on a chalk soil, in consequence of some evident care shown in the 

 record. But, from a note by Thomas Martyn in vol. i. (article 



• ' A kinde of Seseli growing everywhere in the pastures about London,' described In 

 Oer. 894 may be this. Johnson, Ger. em. 1051, says, 'I am ignorant what our author 

 means by this description.' 



