FLORA OF OXFORDSHIRE. I7t 
As in Cirsium anglicum, the first year’s plant has the leaves 
entire. 
ARCTIUM. L. 
A. majus, Schk. Great Burdock. 
Top. Bot. 238. Syme, E. B. v. 23. 699. Nym. 402. 
Native. Hedges, copses, waste ground, roadsides, etc. Not uncommon. 
B. Aug. 
First localised record, W. Baxter MSS., 1827, A. Bardana. 
. Stour. Tadmarton. 
Ray. Otmoor, Rep. of Rec. Club, 1881. Lower Heyford. 
. Isis. Burford, Godstow, Oxford. 
. Thame. Lane leading from Cheney Lane to Bullingdon Green, 
nearly opposite the Windmill, Bx. Thame, Hb. Bx. Albury. 
7. Thames. Caversham with at least two other species, Newb. Maple 
Durham, F. A. Lees. 
Berks, Bagley. Bucks, Northants, Gloster, Warwick. . 
Aor 
A. intermedium, Lange. 
Comp. Cyb. 530. Syme, E. B. v. 25. 7o1. Nym. 402. 
Native. Waysides, etc. Rather rare. B. Aug.—Sept. 
6. Thame. Waterperry, 4. Fr. Headington. 
Warwick. 
A. minus, Schkr. Burdock. 
Syme, E. B. v. 24. 702. Nym. 402. Bx. 330. 
Native. Waysides, woods, hedges, ete. Common and generally dis- 
tributed. B. Aug., Sept. 
First certain record, 7’. Beesley, 1842. See also Rep. of Rec. Club, 1881. 
LA. nemorosum, Lej. 
Warwick.] 
[A. tomentosum, Pers. Comp. Cyb. Br. 530 (error). Oxford. 
Ambiguity. Oxford Botanic Gardens, 1867, to which Mr. Baxter says he 
brought it from Bagley Wood many years before.] 
* * Helianthus tuberosus. The Jerusalem Artichoke. 
Alien. This plant is well established in an old hedgerow between 
Marston Ferry and Water Eaton. The hedgerow is a double one on a 
steep bank, and the plant occurs in it for a space of thirty yards. 
It also occurs on the site of a turnpike near Tetsworth. 
ONOPORDON. L. 
O. Acanthium, LZ. Cotton Thistle. 
Top. Bot. 245. Syme, E. B. v. 2.680. Nym. 402. Bx. 273. 
Denizen. Hedgebanks, roadsides, waste ground. Rare. B. July- 
Sept. 
