140 Flora of Devon and Cornwall, by I. W N. Keys. 
827. — Hedges and thickets. — J). Common : Rav. Tn the 
neighbourhood of Chudleigh : Jones s Bot. Tour. — C. About Fal- 
mouth, " plentiful :" Polytecli. 1856. Hazel-leaved Bramble. 
This form of R. corylifolius is not included in Prof. Babington's catalogue 
loc. cit. for either Devon or Cornwall. 
y. purpureus. R. Wahlbergii Arrh. — Hedges and thickets. 
— D. Mount Batten !, Plymouth (1863). 
In Prof. Babington's catalogue loc. cit. for Devon {auct. Mr. F. J. A. Hort.) 
R. c(Bsius (L). — Hedges and thickets. — J). Catdown quarries !, 
Plymouth (qucBre brought with ballast ?) : Hore in Phytol. Chud- 
leigh ; side of the canal, Exeter; near llfracombe : Rav. Brans- 
combe : Fl.Sid. Near Goodrington : Han. in Nat. ii. 52. Bovey 
Tracey ; at Lidford waterfall: Joneses Bot. Tour.— Q. Plantation 
near College wood, " very rare Polytecli. 1856. Dewberry. 
Not mentioned for either Devon or Cornwall in Professor Babington's 
catalogue loc. cit. 
R. saxatilis [L.)—E.B.2^^^.—J). By the tram road, Common 
wood, Egg-buckland : Briggs. — C- " Reported to grow near 
Bodmin " {Cyb. Brit. i. 352). Stone Bramble. 
In communicating his discovery to Journ. Bot. (i. 377), Mr. T. K. A. Briggs 
says this is "a very satisfactory station, and the only one we know for this 
plant in Devon." I cannot however help thinking, when we remember that 
this species affects " stony mountains or high hills " {Bah. Man.), " especially 
in the north " {Hooker's Br. FL), that we can hardly venture to rank it among 
the plants truly indigenous in this district. In C.B.S. it bears the stigma 
" o " for Cornwall ; and I have learnt from Mr. H. C. Watson that the only 
authority he has for its occurrence in that county is Mr. Bree as quoted in 
N.B.G. from 3Iag. Nat. His. 
Geum Linn. Avens. 
G. urbanum (L.) — E.B. 1400. — Hedges and thickets. — D. 
Frequent. Plymouth ; Tavistock. Plym-bridge ! : Balkw. — C- 
Frequent. Between Saltash and Antony passage ; near Lan 
