806 ‘FIRST RECORDS OF BRITISH FLOWERING PLANTS. 
i i ticularly 
1777. “Upon many of the highland mountains... parti 
on those to cis south of Little Loch Broom, in Ross-shire,’ &¢.— 
Lightf. Fl. Scot. i. 215. : 
ws Uva-ursi Spreng. Syst. Veg. ii. 287 (1825). 1666. a 
miles from Heptenstall, near Widdop, on a great Stone by the 
River Gorlpe, in Lancashire.”—Merreti, 123 
—Lindl. Syn. 174, Previously known to Sir Charles Lemon : see 
EK. B. Supp. 2618. : 
-_E. Tetralix L. Sp. Pl. 853 (1758). 1570. “ Saxosis monti- 
bus Anglix occidue ad Bristoiam exilior fruticat.”—Lob. Adv. 447. 
-. E. Mackaii Hook. in Comp. Bot. Mag. i. 158 (1835). 1835. 
Discovered by William MacCalla near Roundstone, Connemara.— 
Hooker, 1. ¢. 
_ B. cinerea L. Sp. Pl. 852 (1758). 1597. “Hampstead 
Heath.” —Ger, 1199. ; 
-_ E. vagans L. Mant. ii. 230 (1771). 1670. ‘By the way-side 
going from Helston to the Lezard-point in Cornwal, plentifully.”— 
Ray, Cat. 101, 
_ E. mediterranea L. Mant. ii, 229 (1767). 1831. Discovered 
by J. T. Mackay, in 1830, in Connemara [Urrisbeg Mountain] .— 
2, 176. 
pla 
140. But see Pennant, Voy. ii. 245 (1774). 
Phyllodoce taxifolia Salish. Parad. t. 86 (1806). 1812. 
‘* Discovered at Aviemore, in Strathspey, and in the western isles 
of Shiant.”—H. B. 2469, _ « Fir 
Brown, of Perth.”—Sm. E. FI, ii. 222, 
aboecia polifolia D. Don in Edinb. N. Phil. Journ. xvii. 160 
170 Lhw d +s oe 
- Pyrola rotundifolia L. Sp. Pl. 396 (1753). 1640. “In 
Yorkeshire, Lancashire, and further North, yea even in Scotland, - 
in the woods. every where,”—Park. Theatr. 510. : 
- P. media Sw. in Vet. Ac. Handl. (1804), 257. 1807. Dis- 
covered by N. J. Winch in Northumberland.—Winch’s Bot. Guide 
to Northumberland and Durham, ii. 19. 5. B. 1943. 
