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Feedback request: Hippocrepis comosa (210709_406)

 
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oldnick



Joined: 09 Oct 2009
Posts: 5472

PostPosted: Wed Jul 28, 2010 7:13 am    Post subject: Feedback request: Hippocrepis comosa (210709_406) Reply with quote

This post was made automatically in response to a request for comment on the documentation form. There is more general info about such requests here.

Specimen #304512

Taxon:Fabaceae: Hippocrepis comosa L. ("Horseshoe Vetch")
Filed in taxon folder:Fabaceae: Hippocrepis comosa L. ("Horseshoe Vetch")
Collected by:Charles Ottley Groom
Collection date:1851
Locality:Great Britain, VC6 North Somerset, Weston-super-Mare, ST36, Lead Mine Hill
ex herb:Charles Ottley Groom
Institution:Bolton Museum (BON)
Accession number:30-07-14456
Image:Hippocrepis comosa herbarium specimen from Weston-super-Mare, VC6 North Somerset in 1851 by Charles Ottley Groom.
fruits/flowers:seeds/fruits

Inferred details are marked.

Documented by oldnick on 28th July 2010.

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oldnick wrote
Collector inferred from handwriting - site inferred from C O G's other collections in this area around this period - but I have not located Lead Mine Hill; C O G has a sheet of this species collected by W R Crotch from Worle Hill in 1850.


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Chris Liffen



Joined: 08 Oct 2007
Posts: 1850

PostPosted: Wed Jul 28, 2010 10:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

as a thought, perhaps lead mine hill is just descriptive -
Lead mining took place around Weston
quote
Another ore common on Worlebury Hill was galena, a lead ore. This too, was mined, well into the 19th century. Remnants of the industrial landscape can be seen in the "gruffy ground" of pits and spoil heaps on Weston Hill. or
http://www.weston-super-mare.com/newhistory/newhistory.html
or from ancestry gazette
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/SOM/Worle/
"WORLE, a parish in the hundred of Winterstoke, .......There are mines of lead and calamine, but they are no longer wrought."
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