BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 1 884: PHANEROGAMIC BOTANY, 335 



G. J. Johnson. 



The Drosera. Rep. Manch. Sci. Stud. iVss. for 1883, pp. 40-41. Cheshire. 



The three British species can all be found in the neighbourhood of 

 Delamere, and in other parts of Cheshire; and Drosera rofnndifolia is 

 abundant on Lindow Common, near the old grand stand. 



F. Arnold Lees. Yorkshire. 

 Report on Yorkshire Botany for 1880. Trans. Yorksh. Nat. Union, Series 



E. (Botany), pp. 121-123. 



Notes on the novelties observed in the year 1880. 

 [Manchester] Lower Mosley Street Schools Natural History Society. 

 Eeport, October 1884, pp. 15. Yorkshire. 

 Notes on plants collected at Malham and Gordale, on the 22nd of June. 

 J. Cosmo Melvill. 



Charseas graminis. Entom., November, xvii. 253-4. Lancashire. 

 Hair-grass {Deschampia flexiiosa)^ referred to as on Kersal Moor. 

 S. L. Mosley. 



A Visit to York. Young Nat., January v. 39-41. Yorkshire. 



Parmassia palustris and Iris psendacorits in Askham Bog ; and Drosera 

 rotitndifolia at Strensall. 



G. Nicholson. Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire, Northumberland. 

 Petasites officinalis Moench. Journ of Bot., August, xxii. 251. 



' In some parts of Yorkshire and Derbyshire both sexes grow together in 

 great abundance, as also in Northumberland and Lancashire.' 



A. M. Norman. Northumberland, Cumberland, Durham. 



Address to . . the Tyneside Naturalists' Field Club . . May 27th, 1881. 

 N. H. Trans. Northumb., Durham, and Newc, viii. 68-71, 83-86 (1884). 



Notes on plants observed at field-meetings ; at Corbridge-on-Tyne, June 

 6th, 1880; Alston, Cumberland, June 23rd, 24th; St. John's, Weardale, 

 Durham ; Barrasford Crags, North Tyne, September 3rd. 



James F. Robinson. 



Plant Notes. Sci. Goss., July, pp. 149-150, Cheshire. 

 Mostly notes on the folk-names and folk-lore used in Cheshire. 

 John E. Robson. 



Vitality of Seeds of Henbane. Young Nat., January, v. 46-7. Durham. 



At Hartlepool a large number of plants of Hyoscyaimts niger sprang up on 

 the disturbance of ground which had been untouched for centuries. 



Percy Russell. Cumberland, Nottinghamshire. 



Familiar Forest Trees. I. The Oak and the Yew. 111. Sci. Monthly, July, 

 ii. 20-24. 



References to famous trees — the yew-tree of Lorton Vale, near Keswick, 

 celebrated by Wordsworth, and the Parliament Oak in Clipstone Park, Notts., 

 under whose boughs Edward I. held a council in 1290. 



P. Sewell. Yorkshire. 

 Double Cuckoo Flower explained. Nat. Hist. Journ,, October 15th, viii. 138. 



An abnormal Cardanune pratensis, found near Whitby. 

 Whitby Notes. Nat. Hist. Journ., October 15th. viii. 137-138. 

 Notes of field-observations, and of abnormal plants, 

 P. S[e\vell]. Yorkshire. 

 New Locality for Actgea spicata. Nat. Hist. Journ., June 15th, viii. 95. 

 Growing very abundantly ' within eight miles of York ', 

 Sept. 1885. 



