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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 1884: PHANEROGAMIC BOTANY. 



J. G. Baker, 



On the Upland Botany of Derbyshire, Journ. of Botany, January, xxii, 6-15. 

 Detailed and voluminous notes of the plants observed on the higher lands 

 about Buxton, and the heights to which they attain, 



F. Batley. Yorkshire. 

 Botany. Quart. Trans. Barnsley Nat. Soc, 1884, iv. 5-6 and 15. 

 Notes on plants observed near Barnsley in the first half of 1884. 



W. H. Beeby. Lincolnshire. 

 On the Flora of South Lincolnshire. Journ. of Bot., January, xxii. 17 to 22. 



Detailed notes on the plants collected during a stay of eight days at 

 St. James Deeping, on the extreme south border of the county. About 300 

 species were noted, of which 34 are new for the vice county of South Lincoln. 



Arthur Bennett. 



Zostera nana in N. Lincoln. Journ. of Bot., Oct., xxii. 301. Lincolnshire. 



Gathered this year at Cleethorpes, No other record for the East coast 

 between Durham and W. Sussex, even Z. marina not being reported for 

 Lincolnshire. 



Thomas Birks, jun. 



The Sundews. Sci. Goss., May, p. 117. Yorkshire. 



All three British species grow abundantly on Goole Moor. 

 Birmingham Natural History and Microscopical Society. 



Eeport of Meeting, September 9th. Midi. Nat., Oct., vii. 299. Derbyshire. 

 Mr. J. E. Bagnall exhibited Pivipinella magna from near Matlock Bath. 

 Botanical Locality Record Club, 



Report for the year 1883. 8vo., 80 pages, 1884. 



The report, as usual, includes innumerable records relating to all the northern 

 counties. 



Bradford Naturalists' Society. 



Diary of Natural History Observations for 1884. pp. 28. Yorkshire. 



Numerous notes on plants observed throughout the year in the Bradford 

 district and other parts of the West Riding. 



Bradford Naturalists' Society, Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Westmoreland, 



Cumberland, Lincolnshire. 

 [Reports of Meetings.] Nat., June and July, ix., 196 and 215. 



Field-notes made in Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Westmoreland, Cumberland, 

 Lincolnshire. 



[James Britten.] Yorkshire. 

 Review of Grant Allen's 'Flowers and their Pedigrees.' Journ. of Bot,, 

 June, xxii., 185. 



Cypripedijim calccohis is not strictly confined to ' one Yorkshire station.' 

 A. Brotherston. 



Rubus chamsemorus. Gard. Chron., August 30th, p. 277. Northumberland, 



Grows abundantly along the watershed between the counties of Roxburgh 

 and Northumberland, Dumfries, and Selkirk, at elevations varying from over 

 2,500 feet on Cheviot to 1,250 at Moodlaw Loch. Locally known as 'noops' 

 by the shepherds. 



Chas. Browne. 



'Cain and Abel.' Sci. Goss., June, p. 141. Northumberland. 



Orchis latifolia is known by this name in Northumberland. 



Naturalist. 



