lU-1 Ml!. V. ON TllK l’J,01i:V 01' THE CKOMEU I'OUEftT-BEl). 
IfAPPiscuiiGii. — After exceptionally violent storms, numerous 
slabs of clay-ironstone are thrown uji on llappisburgli beach ; these 
are full of leaves of forest trees, and yield the only evidence of 
llecch and Elm, besides leaves of r>ak, three species of Willow, 
and !i few aquatic plants. 
Pakefield. — Not many yards south of the Lighthouse Gap, an 
eroded hollow in the bedded clays is filled with laminated loam 
and peat. About five pounds weight of material, obtained last 
December from the lower part of the hollow, near its northern end, 
yielded about twenty-live species, mostly of marsh and aquatic 
])lants, including two or three unknown elsewhere. This is 
evidently one of the best places for collecting plants, as 
the specimens, though compressed to an unusual extent, are 
olherwiso well preserved. Leaves of Oak are apparently 
alumdant j l)iit, of course, no perfect s])ecimens were obtained in 
washing tlie material. Tliis is the only deirosit in the cliffs near 
Lowestoft which I have yet had an opportunity of examining, 
INlr. Plake’s valuable section of these clifl’s having only recei^tly 
been published. 
Dicotyledons. 
■" IViese species are 71020 to the list, 
Tiialk'Tuum minus. Linn. 
Numerous very acute achenes of Thalictrmn were 
referred by INIr. Carruthers to this species (as 
T. TJexuosmn). Localities — Sidestrand, Mundesley. 
* FLAVUM. Linn. INfeadow Rue. 
The small blunt achenes of this species are common 
at Sidestrand, Mundeslej’’, Ostend, and Pakefield. 
Panunoui.us AQUATiLis. Liiiii. Water Crowfoot. 
Achenes are .abundant nearly everywhere in both 
Ibo Ti'jiper and Lower Fresh-water P>eds. 
- UEPENS. Linn. Creejfing Euttereup. 
A few achenes have been found, but they are 
nowhere common. Eeeston, ]\lundesley, Pakefield. 
