BAKER’S NORTH YORKSHIRE. 
e 
Utricularia minor L. British type. Native. Area 
8.7.3.1. Rangeo-450. Rareinswamps. Leckby Carr; Mora. 
Stockton Forest; O. 4. Moore. ‘Terrington Carr ; R. Teesdale. 
In Yore district in peat bogs S.W. of Addlebrough, 1,400 ft. ; 
J. Percival, 
Primula vulgaris Huds. British type. Native. Area 
general. Range 0-550: Common in shaded and grassy places, 
ascending to the Main Limestone scars of Gunnerside Gill, the 
limestone plateau of Kisdon, and in Widdale almost to the 
356 
boundary of the upper zone. 
Primula veris L. British type. Native. Area general. 
Range 0-350. Common in grassy places throughout the lower 
zone, ascending to the Hambleton plateau near Whitstoncliff. 
The hybrid-Oxlip is not unfrequent in places where this and 
the preceding grow together, especially in the dales. I havea 
series of the same range of hybrids from both France and 
Switzerland, under the name of Primula variabilis Goupil, and 
of hybrids also with the true Primula elatior Jacq. 
Primula farinosa L. Intermediate type. Native. Mon- 
tae, Ard Oo 7. 5.2.2. kange OOoo,  Erequen in 
swamps in the western dales, ascending to the plateau of 
Cronkley Fell. A stemless or nearly stemless variety has been 
met with on Hawkswell Moor near Bellerby, and near the 
station for Polygala austriaca in Teesdale. In the Central 
Valley and in the low country west of the eastern hills the 
species grows in several stations; Kirklington, Camphill, 
Newby Wiske, Dishforth, Woodend, Marderby, Stillington, and 
in Cleveland at Ingleby and Seamer. It is plentiful in Gurtof 
Gill near Boltby, and in a field just where Flazendale opens out 
into the main dale of Rye. Ballast hole near Thirsk Junction ; 
W. Foggitt. In this country, with the exception of two or 
three Lowland Scotch stations, it is confined to the English 
counties on the north of the Humber. With us it is often 
associated with Lycopodium selaginoides, Blysmus compressus 
and Parnassia palustris, 
