HEV. E. N. BLOOMFIELD ON HEPATIC.® OF NORFOLK. 553 
I am indebted to Mr. W. H. Pearson, the author of British 
Hepatic®, for full extracts from Hooker’s Jungermanni®, and also 
for a record of the species found by Mr. E. M. Holmes when 
visiting Norfolk in 1900, while Mr. M. B. Slater of Malton, 
Yorkshire, has very kindly determined or confirmed Mr. Burrell’s 
specimens. Most of the early records are from Hooker’s Junger- 
manni®, but some are from the ‘ Old Botanists’ Guide,’ ‘ Withering’s 
Arrangement,’ and ‘Paget’s Natural History of Yarmouth.’ The 
Herbarium of the late Mr. E. Skepper of Bury St. Edmunds also 
contains a few Norfolk specimens, and there is a list of Hepatic® 
by Miss A. M. Barnard in ‘ Mason’s History of Norfolk.’ The 
nomenclature is for the most part that of the London Catalogue 
of British Mosses and Hepatics, 1881. 
The Abbreviations are as follows : — 
W. H. 13. Mr. W. H. Burrell, Sheringham. 
E. M. II. Mr. E. M. Holmes, F.L.S., Sovenoaks. 
O. 13. G. ‘ Old Botanists’ Guide,’ 1805. 
With : ‘Withering’s Arrangement,’ Edition VI. 
Hist. Yar. Sketch of the Natural History of Yarmouth, by 
C. J. and James Paget, 1834. 
The numbers are those of the vice-counties, 27. East Norfolk. 28. Wost 
Norfolk. 
Marchanti.®. 
Marchantia polymorpha, L. 27. Holt, W. H. B. Doubtless, 
common. 
Conocephalus conicus, L. 27. Very common, but only found 
in fruit at one place on the shady bank of a ditch 
at Ditchingham, Mr. Woodward (With.). Bank of 
stream near Blickling Mills, W. H. B. 
Asterella (Reboulia) hemispherica, L. 27. At Thorpe 
Market by the road from North Walsham to 
Cromer, Rev. G. R. Leathes. On an old bank at 
Antingham near the ponds, D. T. (O. B. G.) 
Guestwick, Skepper’s Herbarium. Houghton, on 
hedge bank by roadside in considerable quantity, 
several square feet in area : Beeston Regis, 
growing on a small hillock raised a few inches 
above the swampy ground, W. H. B. 
