150 
FIRST RECORDS OF BRITISH FLOWERING PLANTS. 
: COMPILED BY 
Wituum A. Crarke, F.L.S, 
(Continued from p. 88.) 
of which he gives a more accurate drawing: ‘“ accuratiorem quam 
’ 
has it in his herbarium “a D, Stephens e Cornubia missum” 
( 
Smyrnium Olusatrum L. Sp. Pl. 262 (1758). 1562. “Our 
Alexander groweth . . . in T] 
a certayn Iade betwene the far parte of Sommerset shere & Wales.” 
—Tuin. ii. 68, 
Bupleurum rotundifolium [,. Sp. Pl. 236 (1753). 1568. 
‘* In Somersetshire betwene Summerton and Marlock ”’ (Martock). 
—Turn. iii. 56. 
- aristatum Bartl. in Bartl. & Wendl. Beitr. ii. 89 (1825). 
1812. Found in Devonshire by the Rey. Aaron Neck, and sent to 
Sowerby Jan. 19, 1802 (HE. B. 2468), and note on original drawing 
for same. 
n Essex,” &.—R. C. C. App. i. 8. This may be the 
‘Bupleurum minimum nondum descriptum floribus luteis’ of How 
(Phyt. 18, 1650), « found in Surrey.”’ 
B. faleatum L. Sp. Pl. 237 (1753). 1834. Found by Mr. 
Thomas Corder in 1831, ‘“‘at Norton Heath, between Chelmsford 
3. 2768 
Trinia vulgaris DC. Prod. iy. 103 (1830). 1570. « Bristoiw 
in Anglia, ad rupem Vincentii, nobis primum magna copia repertam.”’ 
—Lob. Ady. 881. 
_ Apium graveolens L. Sp. Pl. 264 (1753). 1548. “Groweth 
in watery places and also in gardines.”—Turn. Names, C viij. 
‘* Growes wilde abundantly upon the bankes in the salt marshes of 
Kent and Essex.”—Ger. em. 1014, 
A. nodiflorum Reichb. f. Ic, F, Germ. xxi, 10 (1867). 1632. 
‘*Sium umbellatum repens.’’—Johns. Kent, 27. “Almost in every 
watery place about London.”"—Ger. em. 25 ‘ 
A. inundatum Reichb. f. Ie. Fl. Germ. xxi. 9 (1867). 1641. 
“‘Sium pusillum foliis yariis nondum descriptum, in aquosis.’’— 
Johns. Sees Bot. pars alt. 33, “In Surrey near Purbright.”"— 
Cicuta virosa L, Sp. Pl. 255 (1758). 1633. “Found by Mr. 
