127 
TYPHA. 
T latifolia, Linn. 
Native. 
British ? 
T. angustifolia, Linn. 
Native. 
English. 
T. minor, Smith. 
Incognit. 
“In the New Botanist’s Guide a second locality was added, 
through an inadvertence there suggested, viz. in the mere at 
Scarborough” — H. G. Watson (Cyb. Brit. iii. 36). 
ORDER LXXXIV. JUNCACE^. 
JUNCUS. 
1151. J. conglomerates,' Linn. Native. British. 
1151. * J. eefusus, Linn. Native. British. 
Roadsides and boggy pastures ; common. 
1152. J. GLAucus, Sibth. Native. English. 
In similar situations ; frequent. 
1152.* J. diffusus, Hoppe. Native. English. 
In similar situations; perhaps not rare. Near Ilkley ! — Geo. 8. 
Gibson. In the fields near the Woodend railway bridge, near 
Thirsk. Ditches between Newsham and Woodend. 
1154. J. maritimus, Smith. Native. British. 
Near Whitby — Rev. G. E. Smith. Amongst the Coatham salt- 
marshes, and the sandhills in front of the village. 
1156. J. acutiflorus, Ehrh. Native. British. 
Damp fields and boggy places ; common. 
1157. J. lamprocarpus, Ehrh. Native. British. 
A procumbent rush, much resembling this species, but smaller in 
size, with all the segments of the perianth acute, which I col- 
lected in 1853 near the head of Bilsdale, is perhaps J. nigritellus, 
D. Don. J. polycephalus, Flora, 109, is a form of J. supinus. 
1158. J. obtusiflortjs, Ehrh. Native. English. 
In similar situations to the two preceding species, but rare. 
Marsh at Skeeby, near Richmond — Jas. Ward. Askliam bogs, 
near York — 0. A. Moore. By the lake above the landslip at Kirby 
Knowle — Wm. Foggitt. Ditches between Woodend and Newsham 
near Thirsk, and between Newby Wiske and Kirby Wiske. 
1159. J. supinus, Mceneh. Native. British. 
J. uliginosus, subverticillatus, and polycephalus, Flora , 109. Watery 
places ; common. 
