10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «GLAREAL»
Discover the use of
glareal in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
glareal and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Reports and Transactions
Rupestral. Aberdare. 1912 (Evans); Caerphilly, 1922 (Richards). Order
Tortullooae. Phmum Schreb. I95 cuspidatum Schreb. Rare, frequent. Agrestal,
glareal. Llan> dough, 1920 (Wade). Pottia Ehrh. 20o heimii Furnr. Local,
abundant. Glareal.
Cardiff Naturalists' Society, 1922
2
Transactions of the Cardiff Naturalists' Society
Rupestral. Aberdare, 1912 (Evans); Caerphilly, 1922 (Richards). Order
Tortulaceae. Phascum Schreb. 195 cuspidatum Schreb. Rare, frequent. Agrestal,
glareal. Llandough, 1920 (Wade). Pottia Ehrh. 200 heimii Fiirnr. Local, abundant.
Glareal.
Cardiff Naturalists' Society, 1917
3
Cybele Britannica: Or British Plants and Their Geographical ...
British type of distribution. Agrarian region. Inferagrarian—Superagrarian zones.
Descends to the coast level, in the Peninsula. Ascends to 250 yards, in East
Highlands. Range of mean annual temperature 52—44. Native. Glareal, Ericetal.
Hewett Cottrell Watson, 1849
Cwrt-yr-ala, etc. ! A. CVNANCHICA L. Glareal. Locally common, especially near
coast! *A. ARVEN8I8 L. Port Talbot Dock, J.H. Hupp., 81, 1907. SHERARDIA AH
v EN sis L. Glareal, Agrestal. Common! VALERIANA OFFICINALIS L. Sylvestral.
Botanical Society of the British Isles, 1932
5
Glamorgan County History ...
T. arvense L. Glareal. Locally common. Kenfig, etc. I b. Brittingeri Weitenw. Cardiff
, B.E.C., 1927, p. 303. c. perpusillum Ser. Aberavon, J.B. Supp,, 1907, p. 22. T.
maritimum Huds. Littoral. Rare. Pengam Moors I T. scabrum L. Glareal. Locally ...
6
The flora of Oxfordshire: a topographical and historical ...
1044. FI. Berks. 396. Native. Glareal. Pelophile. Heathy ground, chalky pastures,
and hills, &c. Locally abundant. P. July-Sept. First record. Serpyltum vulgare
hirsutum fl. minore et slam, non prominenlibus, Dillenius MS. 1744, see Dill. Herb
., p.
George Claridge Druce, 1927
7
Crown Us with Laurel: The Autobiography of a Book
I>Las what we've heen paging aLL these gears for the cerneterg. Come on. Yoa
can't alojast whatever goa want, RacheL. How h/Lang times are we sapposeal to
go over this? I'rn goar sister." she gLareal at me. "Leaving rne. Making rne Look ...
0'!ln0CO 8€'l'7l,8, C. O . 8'!' CBTL . Pram} and Pascual . . . ll 77 45 1 I I23 16—
ricetal . . . . . . . . . . 25 IO } 3 3 5 — Glareal . . . . . . . . . . . | 38 5 _ . 43 6 — Uliginal
and Inundatal] 6 I I i 0 6 + 3 3 5 $aluda1 and Lacustral 6 x 71 1 2 134 I 7 + iatical .
Before you go a step further you will have to eliminate from all your calculations
most of the plants which Watson calls glareal, i.e. found in cultivated ground
about habitations. And what their limit may be I think we never shall know. But of
this ...
10
Roots of Ecology: Antiquity to Haeckel
... denizen, colonist, alien, incognita, and Hibernian or Sarnian) and second,
habitat (pratal, pascual, ericetal, uliginal, lacustral, paludal, inundatal, vintical,
agrestal, glareal, rupestral, septal, sylvestral, littoral). In his Compendium of the
Cybele ...