3S 



Mr. Winch's Flora of Northumberland, fyc. 



5. R. sceleratus. Water Crow-foot, Celery-leaved 



Crow-foot. 

 Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 48 ; Eng. Bot. C81 ; Curt. Lond. 



Fasc. ii. t. 24; Hook. Fl. Scot. 174; Berwick 



Flora, 122. 

 In watery places, frequent. 



6. R. bulbosus. Bulbous Crow-foot, Butter-cups. 

 Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 49 ; Eng. Bot. 515 ; Curt. Lond. 



Fasc. i. t. 38; Hook. Fl. Scot. 175; Berwick 



Flora, 123. 

 /3 flore plena. 

 a In meadows and pastures everywhere. (2 in Hulne 



Park, Alnwick, N.— Miss Forster, delin. 

 7- R. hirsutus. Pale Hairy Crow-foot. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 50 ; Curt. Lond. Fasc. ii. t. 40 ; 



Eng. Bot. 1504; Hook. Fl. Scot. 175; With. 



iii. 072 ; R. Philonotis, Ehrh. Lindley, Brit. Svn. 



11. 

 On St^ Anthon's ballast hills, N. On Sunderland 



ballast hills, D, 



8. R. repens. Creeping Crow-foot. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 51 ; Eng. Bot. 510 ; Curt. Lond. 



Fasc. iv. t. 38 ; Hook. Fl. Scot. 175 ; Berwick 



Flora, 123. 

 In moist meadows and near ditches, everywhere. 



9. R. acris. Upright Bleadow Crow-foot. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 51 ; Eng. Bot. 052 ; Berwick- 

 Flora, 123; Curt. Lond. Fasc. i. t. 39; Hook. 

 Fl. Scot. 174; Woodv. Supp. t. 246. 



flare plena. 



a In meadows and pastures everywhere. /3 in mea- 

 dows at Mill-green near Ravensworth, D. 



1 0. R. arvcnsis. Corn Crow-foot. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 52 ; Eng. Bot. 135 ; Curt. Lond. 

 Fasc. vi. t. 30; Hook. Fl. Scot. 175; Berwick- 

 Flora, 123. 

 In corn-fields, not uncommon. 



11. R. parviftorus. Small-flowered Crow-foot. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 53 ; Eng. Bot. 120 ; With. iii. 



070. 



By the road side between Cockerton and Norton, D. 

 — Mr. Backhouse. Its most northern locality. 



12. R. hederaceus. Ivy Crow-foot. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 54 ; Eng. Bot. 2003 ; Curt. Lond. 



Fasc. iv. t. 39; Hook. Fl. Scot. 173; Berwick 



Flora, 123. 

 In rivulets and ditches. 



13. R. aquatiUs. Water Crow-foot. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 54 ; Eng. Bot. 101 ; Hook. Fl. 



Scot. 173 ; Berwick Flora, 124. 

 3, Rav's Syn. 249; J- 250; R. pardothrix, De 



Cand. Lindley, Brit. Syn. 12. 

 « and S In ponds and ditches, ^in rivers. 



226. TROLLIUS. 

 1. T. europceus. Globe-flower. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 56 ; Eng. Bot. 28 ; With. iii. 



075 ; Gr. Fl. Eds. 127 ; Berwick Flora, 124. 

 In Ravensworth woods, Heaton Dene, and Shipley 

 woods, in Teesdale ; also near Belford, Alnwick, and 

 Morpeth, and in most of the moist woods, and on the 

 banks of numerous rivulets in N. and D. In moist 

 mountainous woods, abundant. — Wallis. At Cat- 

 cherside, Roadley, and Long-witton, N. — W. C. 

 Trevelyan, Esq. Near Norton, D. — John Hogg, 

 Esq. In moist meadows in the vicinity of Berwick. 

 — Dr. G. Johnston. 



227. HELLEBORUS. 



1 . H. viridis* Green Hellebore. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 57 ; Eng. Bot. 200 ; Curt. Lond. 

 Fasc. vi. t. 34; Hook. Fl. Scot. 176; With. iii. 

 675. 



Upon the banks of the Tees near Whorlton Rev. J. 



Harriman. Near Piercebridge, D. — Mr. Back- 

 house. In the Abbey grounds at Alnwick, N — 

 Miss Forster, delin. 



2. H. fcetldus. Stinking Hellebore, Bear's-foot, 



Setter-wort. 

 Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 58 ; Eng. Bot. 613 ; Woodv. t. 



19; Gr. Fl. Eds. 127 ; With. iii. 676. 

 Upon the banks of Tees a little below Winston Bridge, 

 D. — Rev. J. Harriman. In a wood on the north 

 side of Tyne a little above the Chain Bridge near 

 Hexham, N Mr. A. Hancock, Sp. 



228. CALTHA. 

 1. C. palustris. Marsh Marygold. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 59 ; Eng. Bot. 500 ; Curt. Lond. 

 Fasc. i. t. 40; Berwick Flora, 125 ; Hook. Fl. 

 Scot. 176. 



/3 De Cand. Syst. i. 309 ; C. radicans, Hook. Fl. 

 Scot, and Gr. Fl. Eds. 127 ; but not of Forster 

 in Linn. Tr. viii. 324 1. 17, nor of Smith in Eng. 

 Bot. 2175. 



«■ In marshy meadows, and by ponds and rivers. /3 

 on the margins of the Loughs near Shewing-shields, 

 N. On Eglestone Fell, Teesdale, D. 



I believe the late James Dickson was the only botanist 

 who ever found Caliha radicans wild; but in what 

 part of Scotland I know not. It still keeps its habit, 

 and the triangular shape of its leaves, in the Botanic 

 Gardens of Edinburgh and Cambridge, and with 

 Edward Forster, Esq. in Essex ; and certainly is 

 entitled to rank as a species. Our plant is only a 

 small variety of C. palustris. 



DIDYNAMIA GYMNOSPERMIA. 



229. AJUGA. 

 1. A. rcptans. Common Bugle. 

 Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 65 ; Eng. Bot. 489 ; Hook. Fl. 

 Scot. 179; Curt. Lond. Fasc. ii. t. 43 ; Berwick 

 Flora, 129. 

 In woods and moist pastures, common. 

 Ajuga alpina was never found in the county of Dur- 

 ham. — See Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 66. 



230. TEUCRITTM. 



1. T. Scorodonia. AVood Germander, Wood Sage. 

 Sm. Eng. FLiii. 68 ; Eng. Bot. 1543 ; Curt. Lond. 



Fasc. v. t. 10; Hook. Fl. Scot. 180; Berwick 

 Flora, 129. 

 In dry woods and on hedge banks, not rare. 



2. T. Chama'drys. Wall Germander. 



Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 69; Eng. Bot. 680; Woodv. 



Supp. t. 243 ; With iii. 084 ; Hook. Fl. Scot. 



180. 

 On old hedge banks near Gateshead Park engine, D. 



231. NEPETA. 



1. N. cataria. Nep, or Cat-mint. 

 Sm. Eng. Fl. iii. 70 ; Eng. Bot. 1. 137 ; Hook. Fl. 

 Scot. 180 ; With. iii. 686. 



