THE FLORA OF GLAMORGAN 329 
opinion alone. We 
good side, as it testifies to the spirit of thoroughness brought 
to a laborious and exacting task. The cheapness of the book is 
remarkable. SM 
The Flora of Glamorgan. Edited by A. H. Trow, D.Se., F.L.S: 
Section ii. Calyciflore [pp. 45-78] 1908. Section iii. Corolli- 
9 | 
ich is issued as a 
Supplement to the Transactions of the Cardiff Naturalists’ Society. 
We are glad to note, especially in part iii., a distinct advance in 
many e first, notably in the inclusion of records 
from Mr. Riddelsdell’s Flora published—although this is not 
tioned, as it should have been—as upplement to this 
Journal for 7. We are always willing to place our pages a 
Part ii. begins with a list—by no means a complete one, 
as our former notice showed—of ‘additions and corrections to 
may lead to further search. 
Many of the notes show careful observation of local circum- 
stances. Thus of Medilotus arvensis we read:— Barry Island, 
Onobrychis— It succeeds so well on the Triassic marls and con- 
glomerates that it spreads and establishes itself on the railway- 
banks, as. at Sully. It seldom succeeds on the Lias, generally 
