NOTES ON SOME PLYMOUTH PLANTS. 875 
near Roborough jin the parish of Tamerton Foliott, and. occurring 
likely enough to een brought wi orn eo to the 
hoes employed on the works. It ver occurred by the Saltash 
a on Roa E, Cornwall, se d by the roadside for 
a quarter of a mile or more between the to f Saltash and Carkeel 
ra 8, 
Dandelion seems to be common and widely distributed about. Ply- 
mouth, although it has been supposed to, be rare in this part of 
England. I have noticed it at Cattedown, between Lipson and Laira 
at Newnham, on the southern border of abst near Cholwich 
Town, oil 3 and in E. Cornwall, near St. John 
Arctium majus, Schkuhr.—A single plant near Hessenford, by the 
road loesting thence to See Bands, J uly, al New to Cornwall. 
idens cernua, p my paper ‘On som 
Peculiarities in the BoGRy of the Neighbouthood of Plymouth, » 
inserted in Journ. Bot., vol. i. N.S., pp. 141—146, I supposed that 
and so put ‘‘ absent” seninst it ; oie in July last I found it growing 
plentifully near Hessenford, in a swamp by the little river Seaton, 
arm with Goma irifoliata, This spot is about eleven miles 
rom Plym 
Oro Biniche Hedera, Duby.—Two or three plants on Ivy, growing 
limekiln 
over an old at Cattedown, 1872. Never before recorded from 
any spot near Plymou 
chinospermum Lappula, Lehm.—On August sth, 1873, I found a 
single specimen of this by the Torpoint tand Liskeard turpike-road, 
near Wackar Mill. Probably the seed was brought with imported corn 
and cast out with “siftings’” or refuse—a supposition strengthened by 
the fact that I have seen Bromus secalinus just at the same spot. 
Plantago media, Linn.—On the lawn of Wembury House, Devon, 
in considerable ee x sed gi Seay 
siusy mex Prat —Scattered widely over the country about 
Plym ce = a spots with other species of the genus. 
L vaiy, ibereel it recently, but can already record it from Oreston, 
Hove, Blaxton, and Stoke Damerel, in penn and from Torpoint, be- 
tween Burraton and Notter Bridge, and near Hessenford, in Cornwall. 
Scilla autumnalis, Linn.— ro veda in shallow soil on a rocky 
point at Gurrows Down, Rancele, above the western extremity of 
Bigbury Bay, August, 1873. 
