152 FIRST RECORDS OF BRITISH FLOWERING PLAN‘t's, 
‘‘Groweth much in rockes and cliffes beside Dover.” — Turn. 
Names, C y, back. 
CGfnanthe fistulosa L. Sp. Pl. 254 (1753). 1597. «Neere 
the river of Thames or Tems about the Bishop of Londons house 
at Fulham.”—Ger, 902. 
pimpinelloides L. Sp. Pl. 255 (1758). 19844, ‘¢ Dey 
meadow near Forthampton, Gloucestershire, Mr. Edwin Lees.” — 
N. iv 
kay, 4, 
CE. peucedanifolia Pollich, Hist. Pl. Palat. i. 289 (1776). 
1794, “Banks of the Isis beyond Ifley.”—Sibth. Fl. Oxon, 98. 
Gs. Lachenalii Gmel. FI. Bad. i) 678 (1805). 1690. “In 
fossis . . . in parochia Quaplod agri Lincolniensis non procul ab 
ppido Spalding.”—Ray, Syn. i. 241, 
- Crocata L. Sp. Pl. 254 (1753). 1548. “Groweth muche 
by the Temmes syde about Shene.”—Turn. ames, H iiij, back. 
- Phellandrium Lam. Fl. Fr, iii, 439 (1778). 1597. «In 
most places of England: it groweth very plentifully in the ditches 
by a causey as you go from Redreffe to Detforde neere London.’ — 
Ger. 905. 
GE. fluviatilis Coleman in Ann. N. H. xiii. 188 (1844). 1724, 
“In rivulo inter Woodstock et celebrem illum pontem Ducis 
Marlborugii juxta Blenheim.” —Dill. in Ray, Syn. iii. 216. “In 
Hertfordshire, Rev. W. H. Coleman.” —Bab. Man. ed. 1, 181 (1843). 
ASthusa Cynapium L. Sp. Pl. 256 (1758). 1597, “ Among 
stones rubbish . . . almost everywhere.” —Ger. 905. 
Siler trilobum Crantz, Stirp. Austr. 186, fase. iii. 62 (1767). 
C 
87 t 6c 
Cambridgeshire, June, 1867,”—J, CG. Melvill in Journ. Bot. 1871, 
211, 
Silaus pratensis Bess. ap. Roem. et Schultes, Syst. vi. 36. 
1568. ‘In Englande there is a wilde kinde of Daucus with longe 
smal leaves which groweth commonlye in ranke medowes that our 
countremen call Saxifrage.”’—Turn, iii, 67. 
eum Athamanticum J acq. Austr. iv. 2, 308 (1776). 1548. 
“T never sawe thys herbe in Englande Savynge once at saynte 
Oswarldes ”’ [St. Oswald, in Lee, near Hexham} .—Turn. Nam 8, 
“ Groweth in the bisshoprik of Durram in wild mores called 
felles.”—Turn. ii. 57 (1562). 
Ligusticum scoticum lL. Sp. Pl. 250 (1753). 1684, “Im. 
peratorie affinis umbellifera Maritima Scotiz.”—Sibbald, Scotia, 
i. 82. “On a certain sandy & stony hill six miles from Edinburgh 
towards Queensferry in Scotland.”—Ray, Fascic. 13 (16 
Selinum Carvifolia L. on 6d, 2% . 
Found by Rev. William Fowler in July, 1880, near Broughton 
Woods, N. Lincolnshire.—Report of Bot. Ree. Club (1881), and 
Journ. Bot. 1882, pp. 98, 129, 
Angelica sylvestris L. Sp. Pl. 251 (1758). 1568. «“Groweth 
here in the lowe woodes and by the water sydes.”—Turn. iii. 6. 
(To be continued.) 
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