HISTORY OF THE COUNTY BOTANY OF WORCESTER. 
805 
* Alchemilla vulgaris. A meadow about 500 yards beyond Vaugli- 
ton’s Hole, crossed by a footpath to Moseley Park. 
* Sanguisorba officinalis. Same locality as the preceding; common 
in meadows on the Edgbaston side of Birmingham. 
Epilobium parviflorum. Near King’s Norton. 
CEnanthe fistulosa. Brook side, Yardley. 
* Torilis infesta. Near Oldbury. 
* Valeriana dioica. A meadow about 500 yards beyond Vaughton’s 
Hole, crossed by a footpath to Moseley Park. 
* Carduus eriopborus. Grounds near Dudley Castle. 
* Tragopogon pratensis. New road to King’s Norton, 3 miles from 
Birmingham. 
* Conyza squarrosa. Near Dudley Castle. 
* Chlora perfoliata. The grounds about Dudley Castle. 
* Atropa Belladonna. Left hand side of the court yard of Dudley 
Castle, close to the wall, August 3rd, 1835; July 26th, 1836. 
* Linaria Cymbalaria. On the ruins of the keep at Dudley Castle. 
* Veronica Anagallis. Swampy ground near the bridge at Yardley. 
Galeopsis Tetrahit. In the Halesowen Road. 
* Echium vulgare. Plentiful on the ruins of Dudley Castle. 
* Lysimacbia nemorum. In a meadow near Moseley Park. 
+ Polygonum amphibium. In the stream midway between Avern’s 
Mill and the Pebble Mill, Edgbaston. This habitat is in the 
county of Wanvick, very near the Worcester boundary. 
* Juncus bufonius. A damp lane between Stirchley Street and 
King’s Norton. 
J. lamprocarpus. In the same place as the last. 
* Butomus umbellatus. The brook in Edgbaston Lane near Avern's 
Mill. (Possibly in Worcester.) 
* Scirpus sylvaticus. Side of the brook nearly opposite Avern’s 
Mill, Edgbaston Lane. (Possibly in Worcester.) 
* Blechnum boreale. Moseley Common, near the new road. 
Miss Mary Anne Beilby, “ Analyst,” Yol. VI., 1887, 
pp. 294-296. 
Communicated by E. W. Benson. Previous records by 
Dr. Ick omitted. 
* Thalictrum flavum. Meadows near the Rea. (Possibly in 
Worcester.) 
* Fumaria capreolata. Sandy lanes. (Possibly in Worcester.) 
* Coronopus Ruellii. Lanes near Yardley. 
* Viola palustris. Bog on Moseley Common. 
* Drosera rotundifolia. Bogs on Moseley Common. 
* Dianthus deltoides. Lanes near Moseley, but rare. 
f Arenaria tenuifolia. Gravelly fields, Yardley. (I suspect an error.) 
