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UMBELLIFEEa: 



(C. B. Clarke.) IPtmpmella. 



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large, su'bglobose on the young fruit ; carpels J-terete, dorsally compressed ; ridges 



' obscore ; furro-ws l-vittate on the few fruits available,— Strach. & Wint. suggest 



that this is the Thaspium foliosum, Eoyle, > -. 



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Perennial herbs. Leaves twice 3-partite or sub-2-pinnate, ultimate segments 

 large. Umbels compound, yery lax ; oracts few narrow^ or ; bracteoles much 

 shorter than the pedicels. Calyx-teeth obsolete. Petals emarginate, white. 

 Finitt linear-oblong, long-attenuate at base; laterally compressed, somewhat 

 constricted at the commissure ; carpels terete, subpentagonal, grooved on the 

 inner face; primary ridges slender^ distinct, secondary 0; furrows 2-3-vittate; 

 carpophore slender, 2-fid, Seed ^-terete, dorsally subcompressed, inner .face 

 grooved.— DisTKiB. Species 4, North Asia, Japan, North America, Andes. 



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Mow with 

 HL p. 233. 



Claytonl 



longistyl 



O, laxa, Eoyle HI. 233 t. 52. 



fruit hispic 

 232 : -%?' 



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Nokth-West Himaulya, from Kashmir to Ktjmaon. alt. 5000-8000 ft., frequent. 

 •DiSTBiB. N.E. Asia, Japan, temperate N. America. ' . 



BooistocTc not tuberous. Stem 2-5 ft. Leaves large, ovate ; ultimate segment 

 1-2 in. coarsely toothed, sometimes larger and pinnatifid. Bracts \ in., linear; 

 tays 3-6, 1-4 in.; bracteoles 4-6, \ in., lanceolate; fruiting pedicels 3-6, i-l|^\°-' 

 several other short abortive pedicels indicate male flowers. Fruit \ ^^ JK^^^C 

 »ther suddenly narrowed into conical style-bases ; styles in fruit variable in ^®°^ ' 

 —The Japanese examples have the pinnse more pinnate, the Himalayan hare tn 

 pinnae generally 3-partite: the length of styles cannot be invariably connected wiia 

 any other character, geographical or morphological. * ' ; 



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pinuately 



3-6, lanceolate, or linear, or 0. Flmoers 



2-pinnate with 

 . 1 bracteoles 



central subsessile fertile, others pedicelled male or hermaplirodite. ^^'y^^ 

 obsolete (Indian species). Petals emarginate. FmU oblong, narrowea ^ 

 wards, glabrous (in the Indian species), laterally compressed, narrowed ai 

 commissure; primary ridges broad, obtuse, prominent (in C. cachermn 



widened 



vittate (or vittse 



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30; in temperate regions. 



Technically separated from Anthriscus by the more prominent ridges of the ^^ 

 As regards the Indian species, the only one referred to Anthriscus \B ^^^ :i 

 tinguished by the very scabrid fruit. - v i^ 



vl- C. viUosum, Wall Cat. 558 cAi^y ; stem with ^^^y, ^^^^ - a^ th^ 

 ^liite hairs especially below, upper leaves 2-3-pinnate more finely diviat?^ 



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