442 
MR. A. BENNETT ON EAST ANGLIAN PLANTS. 
Norfolk, E. Co., 27. 
“ Between Hingham and Watton, Sir J. E. Smith in MS. 
List of Norfolk Plants in the Library of the Linnean Society. 
This may refer to the Scoulton Mere locality ? 
Halvergate before 1788. J. Crowe. 
St. Faith’s Bogs, 1799. Sir J. E. Smith. 
Haddiscoe, 1791. T. J. Woodward. 
Filby, 24, 6, 1865. H. G. Glasspoole. 
„ 23, 7, 1877. A. Bennett. 
,, 16, 6, 1886. Rev. Linton in Dublin Herb. 
„ 30, 7, 1894. H. D. Geldart. 
Mr. Geldart wrote that the Rev. G. H. Harris “ had a tale 
that it had been virtually destroyed for the time being by 
some boys who had beat it to pieces with sticks for fun.” 
Heigham Bridge, 1833. P. Paget. 
Norwich to Yarmouth. T. Martyn (c. 1803?). 
Norfolk, W. Co., 28. 
Scoulton Mere before 1781. Sir J. E. Smith. Dersingham 
Moor, near Sandringham. Mr. Cross, of Ely, 1899. I 
believe Mr. Bellingham, of Lynn, was the discoverer of this 
station. 
Cambridge, Co., 29. 
First record Hows’ “ Phytologia,” 1 Int. (1650), 30. The 
record in Babington’s FI. of Cambridge of “ West Fen, Ely,” 
p. 129, was an error, as Mr. Marshall remarks in his “ Notes 
on Plants extinct since I began to Collect in 1833.” There 
is no later record for the Co. than 1820 in Relhan’s 3rd Ed. 
of his Flora. Prof. Babington, lc., calls this “ Fleabane- 
Mullet,” but Dr. Prior* applies this name to Inula dysenterica 
L., giving “ Mullet ” from the French “ mollet ” in reference 
to its soft leaves. I cannot find Dr. Prior’s authority for thus 
applying it, though I have consulted some forty British 
Floras in the attempt. In Canada and the United States it 
is called “ Pale Ragwort,” or “ Marsh Groundsel.” 
* “ Popular Names of British Plants ” (1870), p. 161. 
