SHORT NOTES, 55 
Er RYNGIUM CAMPESTRE IN SurrOLK. eye ay a by Mr. = 
name in a list of ballast-hill introductions, but its endurance for 
nearly ae hundred years in the same locality at Friar’s Goose 
might have given it a right to a less unceremonious dismissal. 
Every fresh locality along our thn will add a link to the chaiu 
of confirmatory evidence, nor is it a solitary instance of a plant of 
general naditineital distribution tit is restricted, or nearly so, to 
the coast line in Britain. Eryngium campestre was collected about 
pt -and-twenty years back, and on more than ep occasion, ee the 
it i 
his residence at aisha cire. 1697. Loving or Lothing land, the 
Ludinga land of Domesday, is that northernmost ar of Suffolk 
which is included between the estuaries of the Yare and (Lake 
Lothing) the Waveney ; ee pebebby: remains dhe ‘to reward 
the explorer.—R. A. Pry 
Scmrus marrrmus, L., 1x Berxsume.—I find that I have 
omitted to place on tuted that a specimen of the above-named 
plant was brought to me in 1873 by Mr. F. Walker, who had col- 
lected it in August of that year at Marcham, near Abingdon. My 
attention has now been drawn to it in consequence of my having 
found a specimen in Rudge’s herbarium labelled ‘‘ Sonning, Berks.” 
These localities are, of course, quite distinct; and as the plant is 
not recorded for the West Thames subprovince in ‘ Topographic: 
Botany,’ or, so far as I can ascertain, elsewhere, its occurrence in 
these inland stations seems worth noting.—James Barren. 
Prants or East Cornwatt.—On looking over my botanical 
work for mah last year or two I find the following + og for which 
ere is a record as growing in this district ei ‘ Topo- 
— Botany’ or in the ‘Journal of Bo tany.’ ta 
tiful in 
d 
28 
g 
oO 
bt 
2 
&, 
iS 
bo 
= 
=o 
@ 
"7 @) 
y 
= 
ms 
> 
= 
ze 
re. B 
a 
iS 
rg, 
also 
ratton-Clovelly, North Desa: June, ron Neottia Nidus. -avis ; 
a few plants ; Week S. Mary, June, 1880.—W. Wise. 
* This is _ Fechner to his MS. Flora, now way yee separated from the 
herbarium to which it is the key by the removal of the latter from the British 
Modinen s to ihe new Natural History Museum - South Kensington. 
