NOTES ON THE FLORA OF MATLOOK. 8387 
enista anglica. Tansley Moor, 800 yds., over gritstone, 
amongst the heather.—G. oe ees — of Matlock Tor. 
Sarothamnus. None seen ex n garden 
onan arvensis. West slope ‘of P Matlock Tor. 
nthyllis Vulneraria. timed tone banks over Bonsall and Mat- 
ick Bath, up to 300 yds. 
Medicago lupulina. D. ——. — up to 250 yds. 
Trifolium pratense. D. Comm n grassy — ™p fen 350 
yds.—T’. medium. Frequent in ‘aoa me thickets.— m. 
Roadsides and forage fields.—T. repens. D. ie com- 
m 
Lotus corniculatus. D, Common up ‘to 350 yds. — L. major. 
ae and damp grassy places up to 800 yds. 
a Cracea. Hedges; not common.—V/. sepium. om- 
mon in ie woods and grassy places up to 300 yds. — V. sativa. Seen 
in cultivation only. 
Lathyrus pratensis. D. Fields and thickets up to 300 yds.; 
common. 
runus spinosa. D. Common in woods and hedges up to 300 
yds. mets insititia. Seen in the Via Gellia, &e.—P. Padus. Plentiful 
in the an epee 
Beira rea Ulm D. Common up to 300 yds. 
Agrimonia pleas See? Frequent up to 250 ee 
Sanguisorba officinalis. Hedge- - at Whatstandwell. 
Poterium Sanguisorba. limestone aia. everywhere 
common, up to the Heights of esha ds. 
Alchemilla vulgaris. D. — in grassy places up to 800 yds. 
Potentilla Fragariastrum. D. Walls and hedge-banks; fre- 
quent.—P. Tormentilla. resist to 850 yds., but seldom seen on 
the limestone. — P. reptans and Anserina. D. Fre requent, both 
ascending to 800 yds. 
Fragaria vesca. D. Common in woods up to 350 yds. 
Rubus Ideus. D. Common in woods up to — Rh. 
Lindleianus. Quite aap oryaniet in woods and thickets at "What- 
standwell and in the gritstone quarry over Matlock bank. We 
looked for nie forms, sey could not find any.—R. rhamnifolius. 
Once seen on the slope of the hill west of Matlock Bridge Railwa vl 
Station.—R. discolor. Common about Tissington and in Dov 
Seen once only at Matlock, in a lane at the top of Bonsall.— kt 
, 0 P mmon 
everywhere in woods and thickets, ascending to 300 yds. in the 
Masson Woods. — R. amplificatus. Thickets at Whatstandwell ; 
plentiful. We never once met with 2. wmbrosus, which is generally 
a prevalent type in hilly tracts in the North of England. — &. 
Sprengelii. Seen once, in hedges by the eS Fa aed al between 
Frequ 
— of Abraham. — R. dumetorum var. concinnus (R. tenui- 
tus Lees) is one of the commonest brambles of the district, 
Zz 
om ourNaL or Borany.—Vou. 22, [Novemper, 1884.] 
