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LEONTODON palustre. Marshes about Yarmouth.

Mr. Turner remarks, “however different this plant certainly appears from the common Leontodon Taraxacum, I cannot but observe that I do not believe them to be specifically distinct: they both grow abundantly in the marshes about Yarmouth, and I constantly remark, that though all which are found in the wettest places are clearly L. palustre, yet as the soil becomes more dry, the scales of the calyx are less erect, the colour less purple and shining, and the leaves take regularly more and more of a runcinate form, till at last they quite lose themselves in the common species. "

·CARDUUS tenuiflorus. Every where about Yarmouth.
CINERARIA palustris. Marsh at Caister, near Yarmouth.
ANTHEMIS nobilis. Yarmouth denes, near the north entrance.
SERAPIAS longifolia. Caister and Runham, near Yarmouth.
TYPHA angustifolia. Common round Yarmouth.

CAREX teretiuscula. Marshes at Caister and Mautby, near
Yarmouth.

pseudo cyperus. Near Yarmouth.

Oederi. On all moist Commons about Yarmouth.

distans. Salt marshes, near Yarmouth.

ampullacea. Common about Yarmouth.

LITTORELLA lacustris. By the margin of Filby broad abundantly. URTICA pilulifera. About Yarmouth.

MYRIOPHYLLUM verticillatum. Caister and elsewhere, near

Yarmouth.

ATRIPLEX laciniata. On Yarmouth beach, near the north battery. pedunculata. Salt marshes at Yarmouth, and by the side of Braydon.

OSMUNDA regalis. Caister by Yarmouth.

PILULARIA globulifera. Filby Common.

GYMNOSTOMUM intermedium. Common on banks about Yarmouth.

obtusum. On Yarmouth denes, in wet ground

by the oil houses. ORTHOTRICHUм aristatum.

Trees about Yarmouth.

NECKERA heteromalla. Trees at Ormesby.

curtipendula. Very abundant on Yarmouth denes by the north battery, but always barren.

HYPNUM subtile. Roots of old trees, at Ormesby.

nigro-viride? Yarmouth denes. Mr. Turner thinks this plant is only a variety of H. cupressiforme.

SPHÆROCARPUS terrestis. Abundant at Caister, and other places round Yarmouth.

LICHEN lynceus. Trees not uncommon about Yarmouth. conspurcatus. On every church about Yarmouth. epipolius. On most of the churches near Yarmouth. corticola. Trees very common about Yarmouth. exiguus. Old rails near the north gates, Yarmouth. varius. On the rails that separate Yarmouth from Caister. cerinus. Young trees about Yarmouth.

Turneri. Common about Yarmouth, but generally barren. porriginosus. Elms at Caister, by Yarmouth.

sophodes. Ach. Old trees about Yarmouth.

umbrinus. Common on old walls about Yarmouth and elsewhere.

inquinans. Very common on old posts about Yarmouth and elsewhere.

contiguus. Very common on the walls of the church-yards
about Yarmouth.

cinereus. Churches and tombstones about Yarmouth.
fuscellus. Churches about Yarmouth.

microcephalus. Caister rails.

tenuissimus. Common about Yarmouth, but always barren.

palmatus. On Yarmouth denes.

sepincola. Caister rails.

cycloselis.

virellus. Trees at Caister, by Yarmouth, and elsewhere. leptaleus.

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Fucus sinuosus.

ruscifolius.)

On the shore at Yarmouth.

Hypoglossum. Shore at Yarmouth.

ovalis. On the shore at Yarmouth, attached to the roots of F. loreus, very rare.

Palmetta. Yarmouth beach.

dasyphyllus. Shore at Yarmouth.

natans. A few fragments once found on the beach at Yarmouth by Mr. Mason.

ligulatus. On the beach at Yarmouth.

barbatus. Dr. Goodenough and Mr. Woodward give for their habitat of this plant, " among the rejectamenta of the sea at Yarmouth." Mr. Turner suspects this is inaccurate, having never heard of its being found there.

mucronatus. A single specimen once washed up at Yarmouth, so fresh that it probably grew in the neighbourhood. fibrosus. Abundant on the Yarmouth beach, in December, 1798, but never seen before nor since.

ceranoides. On Yarmouth beach, very sparingly.

canaliculatus. One specimen found on Yarmouth beach by Mr. Wigg.

serratus. On the Yarmouth beach.

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saccharinus. Once found at Yarmouth by Mr. Mason.

Fucus loreus.

rotundus. confervoides.

On the shore at Yarmouth.

flagelliformis. Shore at Yarmouth, very rare.

Whigghii. Only three specimens were known to exist of this Fucus, all found at Yarmouth, till the Autumn of 1804, when it was abundant on the beach there.

lycopodioides. Among the rejectamenta of the sea at Yarmouth.

subfuscus. Common on the Norfolk coast.

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clavellosus. Shore at Yarmouth.

viridis. Shore at Yarmouth; very common in some summers, in others not to be found.

CONFERVA mertensii.

stricta. villosa.

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On the Yarmouth beach, rare.

byssoides. On the Yarmouth beach.

rosea.

On the planks by the side of the quay, and on Fucus vesiculosus in the Yare at Yarmouth.

repens. On Fucus lumbricalis on the Yarmouth beach.

confervicola. On Conferva rupestris and Fucus purpurascens on the Yarmouth beach.

Ericetorum. Moist heaths near Yarmouth.

orea. Yarmouth beach.

Youngana. Piles of Yarmouth jetty.

riparia. Salt pools at Yarmouth.

flexuosa. Pools in the salt marshes near Yarmouth.

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CONFERVA Turneri. Yarmouth beach.

comoides. Stones at Yarmouth, near the north battery. Borreri.

Yarmouth beach.

flacca Yarmouth beach, on the pods of F. nodosus and vesiculosos.

vesicata. Ditches near the cinder ovens.

ON THE SUFFOLK SIDE OF YARMOUTH.

CHARA hispida. Bogs on Bradwell and Belton Commons. Upon this plant Mr. Turner has made the following observations, "Dr. Smith's idea, in English Botany, VII. t. 463. that this plant is probably only a variety of C. vulgaris, appears to me by no means well founded. Independent of its greater size, and the deflexed acculei on the upper part of its stem, both which marks I have always found constant in all the specimens I have observed, the floral leaves have been three times as long as the Germen, which in C. vulgaris they scarcely equal; they are also far more numerous. Both species grow abundantly about Yarmouth, in the same turf pits, and are often destitute of that cretaceous incrustation which in general distinguishes them I cannot avoid adding, that in my opinion, this Genus would be better left in the class Cryptogamia, with which its affinity is striking, and in which it might tend to clear up some difficulties; and that the pellucid ring of the Anthera, which Hedwig supposed peculiar to C. vulgaris, is even more striking in C. hispida and flexilis.”

flexilis. Rivulet on Hopton Common.

translucens. Browston, near the water, in a turf pit. UTRICULARIA minor. Bogs at Lound, on Gorleston Common, and in old turf pits at Herringfleet.

VALERIANA dentata. In a lane leading from Fabb's farm at Bradwell to Gorleston.

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