55 
Pozuzo Paia de Guallerata, is likewise a synonym of C. cor- 
difolia Mut. Ruiz and Pavon themselves have Jatterly acknow- 
ledged this identity .* 
_The C. hirsuta Flor, Peruv. IT. Te. 192. Cascarillo delgado, 
or C. fenuis Ruiz, Quinol. II. p. 56. is, according to Zea, a 
variety of C. cordifolia Mut. Does- C. purpurea Flor. Per. IT. 
t. 193. or Cascarilla morado Ruiz, Quinol. Art. v. p. 67. also 
belong here? This species varies surprisingly in its leaves, and 
on one and the same tree too. | 
A. C. oblongifolia foliis oblongis acuminatis glabris, fila- 
mentis brevissimis, antheris infra medium tubi latentibus. Mut. 
Quina roxa, Quinquina rouge de Santa Fe, differt a C. lan- 
 cifolid, 1°. foliis latioribus, majoribus oblongis nec gin agra : 
2°. antheris haud in summo tubi latentibus. — aoe 
It grows under the 5th degree North lat. w heehts’ from 600 
to 1300 toises, and is particularly common in the neighinushual 
of Mariquita, a small town, which was for a long time the seat 
of M. Mutis’s botanical expedition. It frequently bears much 
larger fruit than the white Cinchona, C. ovalifolia, for which 
- reason it would deserve the name of mucrocarpa with more pro- 
priety than the latter one. Its bark is less efficacious than that 
of C. Condaminea and C. lancifolia, yet more so than the yel- 
low Cinchona, (C. cordifolia. ) It is more Semis, for week 
constitutions, in inflammatory diseases frequently jangerous 
the more beneficial when apt lied externally in diseases ‘of the 
muscles; suppurating and Sphacelous aces. ; 
The yellow Cinchona, Cascarillu amarilla Quinol. Art. vi. 
p. 71. or C. magnifolia Flor. Per. IT. Ic. 196. which, on ac 
* Supplem. 4 Ja Quinol, p. 18. 
