I 38 WOODRUFFE-PEACOCK : CATALOGUE OF LINCOLNSHIRE 
Var. prostrata Bab.t Divs. 5.11.13. 3 
Buda marina Dum.j Native. Divs. 2-4.9.11.12.17.18. 
fact recorded (Vat, 1894, p. 140) about this species 
found at Alford is a mistake, Mr. J. Burtt Davy tells | 
Claytonia perfoliata Donn.t Alien. Divs. 6.7.10.11-1 
Toft-Newton, in Div. 7, this species flourished in 1894, 
appeared in 1895, but was much in evidence again in 
Rev. C. Wilkinson. 
Hypericum ANDRos#uumM 1. This species was first recor 
the antiquary, Dr. W. Stukeley, in his /#imerarium 
1724, Pp. 32, and reproduced in the Ward-Weir Lzsf, 1 
Hypericum elatum Ait. is the species, a mere garden eset 
the record is a mistake. 
Hypericum montanum L.} Native, certainly. Div. 2. 
ton Woods, on the outcrop of Lincolnshire limestone, om 
widely apart. 
Lavatera arborea L. A mere garden escape. Div. 11. Skeg 
1890 ; Mr. E. M. Browne’s Herb. ! ee 
Geranium sanguineum L.t Native on limestone hills. 
2.10.13.15. 
Impatiens parviflora DC.+ Alien. Divs. 10.15. Wat 
P- 327- 
Medicago sylvestris Fr.+ Native. Diy. 1 3. Canwich, 
on old river gravel; J. S. Sneath. | 
Medicago denticulata Willd.¢ Alien casual in flour mill 
Div. 7. Market Rasen, 1879 ; W. Allen. Presented by 
; Saunders to the Cty. Herb., 1896 (F. A. L.). Ls 
Var. apiculata Willd.+ Alien in flower garden soil. 
Howsham, 20.6.1895. Mrs. W. Booth. 
Melilotus indica All.+ Alien. Divs. 5.13.16. 
spree: pratense L.+ Native. Divs. 1-18. The var. $4 
Re 
‘In the fertile grazing lands between Wainfleet and 
= Lincolnshire, this true perennial clover is abundant. 
root is slightly creeping and extremely fibrous ; in these 
smen the var. sativum Schreb. above], the roots : 
are almost spindle-shaped. The common broad-le® 
is of a lighter green colour, has fewer hairs on the ‘ 
