172 DEVONIAN STATIONS OF PTANTS NOTED IN THE LAST CENTURY. 
Wood, and in the wood by the side of the path leading towards the 
rock on Roborough Down; near the Were at Buckland, twixt the 
oke and a stone that stands out of the hedge; on the sides of the 
little stream that runs by the path leading from Plaistow Down 
of Dartmoor, where the plant is still common. They belong to the 
tract of ‘ Flora of Plymouth,’ and are considerably earlier records 
than any others I have met with for the portions of country to 
which they respectively belong]. 
Vinca minor. Twixt Saltash Passage and Plymouth. [This 
given as follows in Fl. Dev. :—‘+ About the springs in the village of 
Tor, near Harford, Sir Francis Drake & Mr. Huds 
th 
nearest Budley Saltern, and in great plenty in the marshy groun 
just at the end of the village; on the right hand road-hedge twixt 
pratense bestowed on it]. e 
Mentha rotundifolia. At Harberton Ford. [Entry in pencil- 
markings serted in the same manner are—‘* In the village of 
Harberton Ford” against Hudson’s M. spicata, and ‘at Harberton’ 
under M. longifolia. The latter would seem to be one of the forms 
of M. sylvestris L.; the other I cannot determine] . 
Scutellaria galericulata. On the bogs on Bovey Heathfield. 
(Still a plant of the neighbourhood]. — 8. minor. On the bogs on 
and Tolchmoor. [Quite common in the moorland bogs, in damp 
Boe in its neighbourhood, and others of the wilder tracts of 
country]. 
Leonurus Cardiaca. Ten-mile stone towards N(ewton) Busbel ! 
on left hand side. [A note in pencil, and whence the distance 
calculated not stated]. ; 
nehusa. sempervirens. In the village of Ken, on right hand 
going towards N. Bushel. [A very frequent species about villages 
in Devon, though probably not an indigenous one]. 
