50 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
LINCOLNSHIRE PLANT NOTES. 
By E. Aprian Wooprvurre-Peacock, F.L.8. 
Wurtz I have been engaged in collecting a typical herbarium, 
with full notes of every rock-soil found in this county, a few facts 
of general interest have been observed, which are perhaps worth 
years on Lincolnshire limestone, cornbrash, and a mixture of this 
last rock with peat. It was always discovered in cereal crops after 
clear space where a roadside stone-heap had been. The plant 
proves to be a form of Arenaria serpyllifolia. It is absolutely 
decumbent, except when flowering or on the point of flowering, 
and very much branched from the crown of the root. Internodes 
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