REVIEW. 
2(51 
Eriophorum polystachion. In a bog in Wire Forest, and in a boggy 
Held by Finny Rough, near Stone. 
E. angustifolium. In a swamp on the north side of Falling Sands 
Common, Kidderminster ; and in Burnt Wood, near Bewdley. 
The tiro last are vaneties of the same species. The 
Wire Forest Cotton Grass is E. latifolium. 
Hoppe. 
Carex remota. In the Rocky Wood, Finny Rough, near Stone. 
C. Pseudo-Cyperus. In the Lodge Pools, Kidderminster. 
Melica uniflora. Blackstone Rock, near Bewdley. 
* Nardus stricta. On Sutton Common, near Kidderminster. 
* Blechnum boreale. At Foxholes, and on the Stourport Road, near 
the Larches, Kidderminster ; Rock Wood, Burnt Wood, and 
Blackstone Rock, near Bewdley ; in the Rocky Wood, Finny 
Rough, near Stone ; and in a dingle between Dunley Hall and 
Abberley. 
* Asplenium Ruta-muraria. On the church at Stone. 
* A. Trichomanes. At Blackstone Rock, near Bewdley. 
Aspidium spinulosum. In a cave on the right-hand side of the road 
from Kidderminster to Bewdley. 
A. dilatatum. Blackstone Rock, near Bewdley. 
* A. (Athyrium) Filix fcemina, with a scaly stalk. In the Rocky 
Wood, Finny Rough, near Stone. 
Of the 80 plants enumerated in Perry’s List, 32 only can 
be claimed as new to the county. There is a good deal of 
confusion in the nomenclature of places. Finney, otherwise 
Finny Rough, near Stone, so called by Perry, and still known 
to the country people as the Finney, is noted on the Ordnance 
map as “ Fenny Hough." The Parish of Abberley, near the 
Hundred House, is confused with Habberley, near Kidder¬ 
minster, from which the H is omitted. It is in the middle of 
Habberley Valley that Pecket Rock is situated, miscalled by 
Perry Ticket Rock. I have been unable to identify “ Fox¬ 
holes, *’ a locality named very frequently by Perry. 
(To he continued.) 
Palaeolithic Man in N.W. Middlesex. By Jno. Allen Brown, F.G.S., 
F.R.G.S., &c. Macmillan and Co., 1887. 
This book of 200 pages, with plates in addition, consists mainly of 
a compilation from the author's reading ; but contains also an account 
of some original investigations which, a year or two ago, excited some 
interest when presented in the form of papers to the Geologists’ 
Association and Geological Society of London. It is almost needless 
