630 
NOTES ON SOME RARER NORFOLK PLANTS. 
berry, but they were probably cranberry. Erica tetralix, 
though widely distributed and abundant in Norfolk and Suffolk, 
had not hitherto been noted in the “ breck ” district, but we 
found it on the fen borders on Palmer’s Heath, Brandon (S). 
E. cinerea has not yet been observed in Breckland. Pyrola 
rotundifolia was found on Roydon Common, where it was 
noted a century ago ; Centunculus minimus on Stoke Ferry 
Common ; Gentiana Pneumonanthe was fairly abundant on 
East Winch Common ; and Gentiana campestris occurred on 
Green’s Common, Runton. In the carrstone quarry at Snettis- 
ham we counted 82 flowering plants, up to 6 feet in height, of 
Verbascum pulverulentum. Linaria minor was found in 
Heacham chalk-pit ; Antirrhinum Orontium at Felthorpe and 
Earlham ; Digitalis purpurea abundantly in a carrstone quarry 
at Blackborough End, Middleton, and at Easton, Stalham, and 
Great H ockham. In North-West Suffolk we found a new 
station for Veronica spicata, some hundreds of plants in an 
area of 60 by 15 yards, among poor specimens of Pteris, 
Calluna, and Carex arenaria, outliers from the main calluna 
association to the westward. On our 1912 tour we searched 
for Veronica Anagallis, distinguished from V. aquatica, Bern- 
hardi, to which most of our British specimens belong, by the 
bluish petals, and pedicels at acute angles with the stem. We 
found Anagallis at Babingley and Euston (S) ; all other 
specimens were aquatica. Orobanche elatior was noted at 
Heacham chalk-pits; and Utricularia intermedia in a fresh 
station at Derby Fen, Grimston. Mentha piperita was found 
at West Runton ; M. longifolia at Carleton Rode ; M. 
Pulegium on Hanworth and Beeston Commons, and b. erecta 
on Flegg Burgh Common; Origanum vulgare at Edgefield ; 
Scutellaria minor in the old station on Holt Lowes ; Littorella 
uniflora on Thwaite Common ; Scleranthus perennis at Ram- 
part Field, Icklingham (S) ; and Rumex maritimus in inland 
stations at Thwaite, Hanworth and Stoke Ferry Commons, and 
in the brickyard at Fodderstone Gap, Shouldham Thorpe, 
where a quantity was growing in gault pits on one side of the 
road, while by a pool on the other side there was a small 
