Short Notes and Queries. 



55 



Lincoln North, 54. 



1. Clematis Yitalba, f (54), 1878 Rep., p. 8 



155. Silene anglica, 1881-2 E-ep. , p. 185 



247. Rhamnus frangula, 1877 Re., p.p. 211 and 234 



291. Ornithopus perpusillus, 1876 Rep. , 160 



384. Cailitricheplatycarpa, 1876 Rep., p. 162 



592. Arctmm intermedium, 1881-2 Rep., p. 192 



818. Teucrium scorodonia, 1875 Rep., p. 107 

 1040. Epipactis palustris, 1881-82 Rep., p. 196 

 1213. Carex elongata, 1881-82 Rep., p. 198 



1218. Carex eu-arenaria (as occurring inland as well as on the coast), 



1879 Rep., p. 61 

 1232. Carex acuta, 1880 Rep., p. 138 

 1303. Aira caryoiDhyllea, 1875 Rep., p. 112 

 1310. Avena pubescens, 1880 Rep. , p. 139 

 1322. Glyceria plicata, 1880 Rep., p. 139 

 1384. Polystichum angulare, 1880 Rep., p. 139 

 1410. Botrychium lunaria, 1875 Rep., p. 113 

 Lincoln South, 53. 



135. Viola Reiclienbachiana, 1879 Rep., p. 52 



257. Anthyllis vulneraria, 1879 Rep., p. 54 



345. Rosa tomentosa, 1881-82 Rep., p. 188 



528. Asperula cynanchica, 1879 Rep., p. 57 



652. Cineraria campestris, 1877 Rep., p. 285 



905. Plantago Coronopus, 1877 Rep., p. 220 



950. Rumex palustris, 1881-2 Rep., p. 227 

 1056. Habenaria viridis, 1880 Rep., p. 137 

 1234. Carex eu-flava, 1880 Rep. p. 138 

 1420. Equisetum maximum, 1880 Rep., p. 139 



The following species recorded in the reports are also omitted, but 

 because considered nowhere indigenous in Britain, and as such, not 

 traced out comitally at all in the " Topograpical Botany." 

 273. Tripolium hybridum (par. 53), 1877 Rep., p. 211 

 650. Senecio saracenicus (par. 53), 1880 Rep., p. 136 

 653. Doronicum Pardalianches (par. 54), 1877 Rej)., p. 218 

 Nepeta Cataria. — This plant is queried an escape," in Top. Bot, 

 edition 1, and the query is not erased in edition 2, although in the Bot. 

 Rec. Club Reports for 1877, p. 241, and elsewhere, it is proved to occur 

 abundantly, and under no circumstances entitling it to be suspected. 



REYIEW. — The Natural History of Hastings and St, Leonards and 

 the Vicinity," First Supplement, 1883, Is. — We have been very pleased 

 to receive from the Rev. E. N. Bloomfield, a copy of the first supplement 

 to the fauna and flora of the Hastings district, published in 1878, by the 

 Hastings and St. Leonards Philolsophical Society. No better proof of the 

 great usefulness and energy of the Sussex naturalists is required than 



