Page:The Botanist's Guide Through the Counties of Northumberland and Durham (Vol 1).djvu/221

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CRYPTOGAMIA LICHENES.
1415. Baeomyces roseus.

Lichen Baeomyces.—Eng. Bot. t. 374.

On the Earth in mountainous Situations.

1416. Baeomyces rupestris.

Lichen byssoides.—Eng. Bot. t. 373.

On Earth and Stones in mountainous Situations.

1417. Baeomyces placophyllus.

On the Moors about Egleston, D. but rare.-H.

Obs. This appears, from a Specimen famished by Dr. Swarts, to be nothing but the Apothecia of Baeomyces rupestris, upon the Thallus of one of that Subdivision of the Baeomyces called Scyphophoron. The Crust of the Egleston Moor Plant is exactly like that of Swarts's Specimen; but its Apothecia more resemble those of Lichen Baeomyces of Eng. Bot.

1418. Baeomyces papillaria.

Lichen papillaria.—With. 4. 45. Eng. Bot. t. 907.

On Moors near Butsfield, the Woodlands, &c. on the Ground upon Ravensworth Fell, and upon Egleston Moor, D.

1419. Baeomyces caespiticius.

On an old Stone Wall in Jesmond Dean, above Hadrick's Mill, N.

1420. Baeomyces cocciferus.

On Earth in mountainous Situations.

1421. Baeomyces cornucopioides.

On Earth in mountainous Situations.

1422. Baeomyces digitatus.

On decayed Trees, and on the Ground in mountainous Situations.

1423. Baeomyces deformis.

Lichen deformis.—Eng. Bot. t. 1394.

On the Ground in mountainous Situations.

1424. Baeomyces bellidiflorus.

At Prestwick Car, and on Cheviot, N. On the Mountains in the Neighbourhood of Egleston, D.

1425. Bae-