ADDITIONS TO THE BERKSHIRE FLORA 23 
1, Carswell, Miss M. Niven. M. Briquet a bel saloons to 
be a hybrid of M. aquatica and M. viridis. — M. v ata Huds. 
“var. Motoliensis Opiz f. purpurea. .1. Wytham Meadows.——* Var. 
eiata Host, 1. Wytham Meadows.—WM. arvensis L. “var. Skofitziana 
Kern. 1. Godstow.— M. Pulegium L. -8. Cl iashill An erect 
form, Wallis. 
Thymus Chamadrys Fries. 5. Sandhurst, Marshall (Journ. Bot. 
— 85). Coleman’s Moor, ie y; 
Calamintha arvensis Lam. 2, Ona wall at Pusey. 4. Eastfield 
Newbury, Herb. Bicheno, ret 
Salvia Verbenaca L. 4. Donnington Castle, Herb. reo 
S. pratensis L. 1. One plant in field at Besilsleigh. 2. Upto 
Miss Fry. Of casual origin here probably. — S. verticillata re 2. 
Oxford railway-side. A “casual. 
Sideritis montana L. 4. Near Newbury, Miss Beales. A casual. 
Marrubium vulgare L. 5. Near pocae fverett. Casual. 
Lon hybridum Vill. 3. Sulham, J 
ccrium Scordium L. 1. Wytham Sendowi: abundant in one 
plasad the lower level of the river allowed me to reach a marshy 
spot which I had only cursorily examined hoki, and here the 
plant grew in great luxuriance and in full flower. The last Berk- 
shire record was that of Lightfoot.i in 1780. 
Plantago Coronopus L. *var. tenuisecta (Wirtg.). 2. Boar’s Hill. 
—P. uniflora. Cir nea Bagshot, i 
Littorella juncea Berg. 8. Bucklebury Lower Common, Wallis. 
First record. 
Aiwa retroflecus L. 5, Clewer, Everett. A casual. 
Chenopodium polyspermum L. 8. Clay Hill Common, Wallis. 
4. New bury, Bicheno Herb.—Var. cymosum. 6. Clewer, Everett.— 
C. album *var. glomerulosum (Reichb.) teste Freyn. 2. Near Oxford 
by “8 eee: —C. murale L. 5. Clewer, Everett.—C. wer er; 
4, ury, Herb. Bicheno, as C. valinaia. Reading, J. Downes, 
a (Hork. Bab.).—C. Bonus-Henricus L. 4. Thatcham, Summers. 
*Salsola Kali L. 4. Waste ground near Reading, Wallis. A 
casu 
al. 
ae deltoidea Bab. 5. Maidenhead, J. A. Power, 1838 
(Herb. 
Bei i yna W.&K. 4. Embankment of Lambourn Railway, 
Ff, Con Alien. 
Pelion dumetorum Li. 5, Copse, Coleman’ 8 Moor, Wallis. 
Hedge near Loddon Bridge. — P. aviculare L. *var. denudatum 
(Desv.). See Boreau, Fl. du Centre, ed. 3, vol. i. 559, a@ species. 
This is the plant from the saline meadow at 2. Mareham which 
received various names from our British experts. be eC minus Huds. 
*var. albidum Braun in Flora (1824), 359. 2. St. Neot’s Meadow, 
Abingdon. 5. Near Hurst. — P. Bistorta L. 5. Meadow near 
— s Moo: 
Fum nevieler L. 4, Roadside between Kintbury and Hunger- 
ford, Summers, 
Viscum alum L. 8. Surley. 4, On black poplar at Boxford. 
