J' ^ ^ri 



1391 



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^^ 



^S'EDUM* Cepsea. 



4 



V 



f * 



4-r 



Panickd Stonecrop. 



7 





DECANDRIA PENTAGYNIA. 



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Nat. ord. CRASsuLACEiE Juss. (^Introduction to the natural sj/stem 



oj' Botany y p 

 SED UM. 



I6L) 



-** 



Supr<ij vol. 2. JbL 142. 



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4 



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Planifolia, Jlorihus alhisy rubris, ant ccBvuleis. Dec. prodr. 3. 402. 

 S. CepcBa ; caule herbaceo terete pubescente, foliis planis integerrimis, 

 infimis subspatulatis, ^uperioribus oblongis linearibusve, floribus pahi- 

 culatis, petalis In acumen ariatatum desinentibus. — Dec. L c. 404. 



S. Cepsea. 



S. paniculatum. 

 S- galioides. Allioni pe 

 S. spatulatum, Waldst 

 S. tetraphyllum. Smith 

 S. alsinefolium. Alliom 

 Anacampseros Cepsea. 



Linn, species pL 617. 



Lamarck sec. Decand. 



I /. 65./ 3. 



et Kitaib. 2. 



prodr. fl. Gr 

 Iped. t. 22./ 

 Haworth. ** 



Varr. 5^c. Decan- 

 dollium. 



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A very common plant in the south of Europe, where it 

 assumes different appearances according to the situations 

 in which it grows; from these the several erroneous species 

 above noticed, after Decandolle, have been formed. Under 

 its common appearance it is found every where upon 

 stones, rocks, and walls, on all the northern coast of the 

 basin of the Mediterranean. It appears under the form of 

 S. alsinefolium in shady places in Piedmont, on the moun- 

 tains ofRoaschia and elsewhere; as S. Valioide's in Pied 



mont and Cors 

 Hungary; and as S 



as 



S. spatulatum in the 

 phyllum in hot plac 



uth of 

 in the 



Moreaf. ^It is particularly variable in the degree of length 



* 



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Said to have been so naxned"^ semper sedendo, because it is always 



seated, as it were, upon s 

 Greeks, according to some. 



This Cepsea is the xnxcux of the 



