182 FLORA OF OXFORDSHIRE. 
First record, Sib. 1794. 
1. Stour. Tadmarton. 
2. Ouse. Mixbury. 
3. Swere. Drayton Lane, Wroxton near the Tuscan Temple, Guil. 
Bretch, Bees. Somerton railside. 
4. Ray. Between Middleton Stoney and Bicester, A. Fr. Headington 
Wick, H. Bos. Islip, Stow Wood, Upper Heyford. 
5. Isis. Cornbury Park, Charlbury, Ditchley, Blenheim Park, North 
Leigh, Worcester College Gardens. 
6. Thame. Thame, Hb. Bx. Bullingdon, H. Bos. Shotover, Wheatley 
Quarries, Holton Quarries, Haseley, Culham. 
7. Thames. Nettlebed, Crookly Green, A. Fir. Goring, Whitchurch, 
Grime’s Dyke, Beacon Hill, Binfield, Ipsden. Common on the 
Chilterns. 
Berks. Cumanor, Frilford. 
CREPIS. L. 
c. virens, L. 
Top. Bot. 227. Syme, E. B. v. 161. 818. Nym. 457. Bx. 366. 
Native. Agrestal, etc. Roadsides, fields, dry banks, ete. Very 
common and generally distributed. B. June—Sept. 
First record, Sib. 1794. C. tectorum, L. 
Mr. Newbould says the Oxford and Goring plant is large and with only 
one stem. 
The stout plant with erect habit, and phyllaries and peduncles covered 
with dark glandular hairs, is not unfrequent, and is probably C. agrestis, 
W.K. A smaller more branched plant with pubescent phyllaries is likely 
C. diffusa, DC. The two varieties are connected by a chain of inter- 
mediates, the plant being very variable. 
C. fetida, L. 
Syme, E. B. v. 157. 815. Nym. 458. 
Native (?). At Stonesfield Quarries in Oxon, eight miles from Oxford. 
MS. note by Dr. Lightfoot in Hudson’s Flora Anglica, about 1760. No 
other record. 
Berks. Near Maidenhead Station, near Reading, Bisham Wood, Brit. 
Bucks (?). 
C. taraxacifolia, Thuil. Barkhausia, DC. 
Syme, E. B. v. 159. 816. Nym. 459. 
Native. Viatical. Fields, waysides, railway-banks, etc. Rather rare. 
A.or B, June—Aug. 
First record, the Author, 1884. 
5. Isis. Charlbury, on railway-banks for some distance, near Ramsden 
