448 
MR. A. BENNETT ON EAST ANGLIAN PLANTS. 
was Vicar of Ulverston, and that he had sought the plant 
without success. 
Nottingham, Co., 56. 
It is probable that the record of Peucedanum in this 
County referred to Selinum Carvifolia L., which has been 
found by Prof. Carr only a few miles away from the recorded 
station of Peucedanum. On first seeing the Selinum growing 
among rushes, etc., he quite thought he had rediscovered the 
Peucedanum. 
Yorkshire, S. E. 
“ In great plenty in low wet moors, with Iris pseudacorus , 
near Whitgift, four miles from the confluence of the Ouse 
and Trent.’’ Withering, Arr. Brit. PL, Ed. VII. (1830), p. 372. 
Now (1910) quite extinct. 
Transactions, VII., 471, line 14 from bottom : for “ Wither- 
lode” read “ Witherslode and Kendle.” Withering, lc. Ed. 2, 
1787 * 
I have nowhere seen it stated that this plant has two forms 
of root, whether the result of age only I am unable to say, as 
I have never had it in cultivation. 
“ Gathered by Dr. Smith in the ditches of a very wet reedy 
meadow between Heigham and Norwich, July, 1794.” Eng. 
Botany, Ed. 1. 
Lathyrus palustris, L. 
The Eng. Botany plate t. 169, April 1st, 1794, was drawn 
from specimens gathered by Dawson Turner at Burgh, 
Suffolk, on July 1st, 1793. 
Suffolk, E., Co., 25. 
Blunderton Marshes, 1897. Mr. A. Dutt. 
Norfolk, E., Co., 27. 
Ward Marsh by South Walsham Dyke. J. and A. Bennett, 
1903. 
Upton Broad, 1885, plentiful. H. D. Geldart in litt. 
* Petty in “ Naturalist” (1901), 308. 
