ADDITIONS 
Page. 
62. After C. officinalis , insert C. 
groenlandica ; groenland 
Scurvy - grass ; Morlwyau 
groenlandaidd. 
This plant, though it 
grows so near me as the 
beach below Friars, escaped 
my ken, in this shape , till 
April, 1813; but, when it 
creeps to some distance from 
thence, and occupies the old 
»• 
roofs and walls in Beaumares, 
which it does plentifully, it 
becomes, as I have now had 
an opportunity of ascertain¬ 
ing, “ Cochlearia minor ro- 
tundifolia nostras,” &c.— 
R. Syn. 303. 4. in which 
state 1 have known it for 
many years past.— See Trans. 
Lin. Soc. v. X. 344. 
65. 1.7. After yd y add Cada- j 
forth. | 
111 . Let the following be inserted I 
alphabetically, under the di¬ 
vision Leprosus. 
L. abietinus. 
L. albellus. 
L. atro-Jlavus. 
L. atro-rufus. 
L. byssinus. 
L. candelarius, E. B. is the 
Page. 
L. concolor y Dicks. 
v. p. 114. 
L. Candidas. 
L. ex anthematicus. Above 
Baron-hill, on a rock near 
the poultry-yard. 
L. graniformis. 
L. luteus. Baron-hill lawn 
on trees. 
112. L. maurus. E. B. 
L. rufus is byssoides. E. B. 
L. sinopicus. E. B. If the 
botanical tourist should be 
disappointed in his search 
for this very rare plant in 
Anglesey, and if the line 
of his ramble leads him 
towards Beddcelert, he 
can scarcely fail of find¬ 
ing it near the antique 
family - seat, or resting- 
place, at Nant y the man¬ 
sion of Sir Robert Wil¬ 
liams, Baronet. 
L. squamulosus. E. B. 
L. varius. Near LIysdulas, 
on deal pales. 
L. vernalis. Near Bodor- 
gan. 
L. umbrinus. This is in¬ 
cluded in the niger of 
Hudson. 
