446 
MR. A. BENNETT ON EAST ANGLIAN PLANTS. 
Norfolk, E. Co., 27. 
East Ruston Parish with South Fen Common, this adjoins 
Honing Common, where Mr. Buckhurst found it.* 
Catfield Fen, Rev. M. C. H. Bird in 1898, and again by Mr. 
and Mrs. Nicholson in 1905. 
Cambridge, Co., 29. 
It was gathered on Hinton Moor in 1785 by Mr. W. Solet 
(1639 — 1802); in Burwell Fen by Prof. Henslow in 1836 
(Dublin Herbarium), but lost in 1848, as also in Bottisham 
Fen by G. S. Gibson. 
“ Power told me that the number of Sturmia Loeselii in 
Burwell Fen on June 24th, 1835, was enormous.” Babington’s 
Jour, of Life (1897), p. 40.7 
Gamlingay Bogs were drained before 1848, but up to 1853 
Malaxis paludosa remained in a little patch of bog, but in 1862 
a crop of potatoes was growing where the Malaxis was 
gathered in 1853. 
I have been unable to find when Liparis became extinct at 
Gamlingay, but J. Power gathered it there circa 1831. 
Hunts, Co., 31. 
Right-hand side of Holme Lode. Rev. J. Roper in Fen 
and Mere (1876), p. 59. 
The record of Yaxley and Stilton Fens will be found by 
the Rev. W. T. Bree in “ The Phylologist,” IV. (1851), p. 103. 
These have long been drained. 
For Lincoln there is no further record of its occurrence. 
The English Botany plate t. 47, March, 1792, was drawn 
from specimens gathered on Hinton and Teversham Moors 
(Cambs.) by Rev. R. Relhan.° 
Dickson published a specimen in his Hort. Sicc., fas. 9, 
No. 11, 1806. 
* Transactions, VIII. (1909), 666. 
t Author of “ Menthae Britannicse,” 1798. 
I For “John ” read “ Joseph,” Transactions, 335, Yol. VII. 
° Chaplain of King’s College, Cambridge. 
