244 CHENOPODiACEiE. [Chenopodium. 



"Waste places, and under walls near the sea ; very rare, if 

 not extinct in Ireland, Fl. August, September. 



1 ? or 2. ? Included, with doubt, in the "Flora of Cork," 

 but has not been found there recently. Mr. Carroll tells us 

 that within the last ten years C. oMum and C. polyspermum 

 were occasionally offered for sale in the market at Cork, being 

 probably cultivated for medicinal purposes. — 2. Tramore, 

 Waterford ; gathered many years ago by the Bev. S. Madden, 

 who well remembers its odious smell. — 5. Along the wall of 

 St. Mark's Church, Dublin; Ir. Flor. Found sparingly 

 near Sandymount ; and between the Custom-house and 

 Annesly-bridge, several years previous to 1836 ; Flor. Hib. — 

 12. In the neighbourhood of Belfast (Mr. Templeton) ; 

 Fhr. JJlst. 



Not recently observed in any part of Ireland, and Threlkeld 

 remarks that, though much employed medicinally in his time, 

 he had never seen "Atriplex olida" growing wild, so that it 

 may have been introduced in the very few localities where it 

 has occurred. 



2. + C. iirtaieum (Linn.) — Upright Goose-foot. 

 Districts ----5------ 12? 



Lat. 53°-54° or 55°. East, and perhaps South, of Ireland. 

 Type in Great Britain, Germanic, inclining to English. 



Waste places about towns ; very rare. Fl, July to Sept. 



5. Waste grounds about Wellesley Chapel, Dublin; Ir. 

 Flor. 'In the College Park, and other places near Dublin ; 

 Fhr. Hib. Once found at MiUtown, near Dublin, many 

 years ago ; /. G. Once seen, and then only two or three 

 plants, on a mud wall at the top of Dominick-street, near the 

 present site of the Broadstone Station, at Dublin ; D. M. 

 Wade describes it as frequent on dung-hiUs, ditch-banks, 

 and byroad-sides; Fhr. DuhLj but it is now very scarce. 

 12 ? Near Carrickfergus, at the junction of the Templepatriok- 

 road (Mr. Templeton) ; Flor. Ulsl. Never seen in the North 

 of Ireland by £>. M. 



The Rev. S. Madden believes that he has seen G. urbicum 

 at Castlecomer, in Kilkenny, but we have not seen sped- 



