340 WOODRUFFE-PEACOCK : CATALOGUE OF LINCOLNSHIRE PLANTS. 
Sison Amomum L.t Native. Common N, and S., 
Sium latifolium L.t Native. Common N. and S. 
Sium erectum Huds.t Recorded for Bot. Divs. N.1 (2) 12s 
5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11 (4) S. 13, 14. 
fEgopodium Podagraria L.+ Native. Fairly common N. 
and §, 
Pimpinella Saxifraga L.{ Native. Common in N. and fairly 
so in $. 
Var. dissecta Spring.t A not uncommon native variety. 
Pimpinella major Huds.t Native. Its record distribution in 
Bot. Divs. is N. 1, 2 (4), 3 (2), 5 (2), 7 (2)) 8 (4), 10 (2), 11 
(3), 12, S. 13 (4), 15 (2). 
Conopodium denudatum Koch.t Native. Common N. and S. 
Myrrhis odorata Scop. A denizen or alien. N.—Broughton 
Wood, 1875; Rev. W. Fowler. Herb. Brit. Mus. P. Thompson 
records it for Skirbeck Hundred. 
Chzrophyllum temulum L.t Native. Common N. and S. 
Scandix Pecten-veneris L.t Native. Common N. and §S. 
Anthriscus vulgaris Pers.| Native. Common N, and S. 
Anthriscus sylvestris Hoffm.t Native. Very common N. 
and S. 
Anthriscus Cerefolium Hoffm.t Alien escape. Wispington, 
7-6-93; Rev. F.S. Alston. This species appeared in my garden 
this season, and is the only one to my knowledge the Herbarium 
and 15,000 dried plants I have examined have left me. 
Herbarium seeds are generally sterile. The Wispington spm. 
was only half dry when it came to hand. 
F@NICULUM OFFICINALE All.t Recorded in Mr. J. Britten’s Zest 
in White’s Lincolnshire, 1872. 
CoriANDRUM saTivum L. Alien from scattered seed. Turner 
and Dillwyn’s Botanists’ Guide, 1805, says :—S.—Folkingham, 
very plentiful and apparently pest pees The Rev. J- 
Dodsworth found it there about 1838. 
Crirymum mAxiTiuUM 1. A mistake which has become current on 
the authority of Dr. Stukeley—through the blundering of the 
Thompsonian Zzs¢ writers—he, no doubt, records the Lincoln- 
shire Samphire—Sadicornia herbacea L. But I have not seen 
his work yet. 
CEnanthe fistulosa L.t Native. Very common N. and S. 
Naturalist 
