377 
49. Scutellaria orientalis, Linn.—Kanaour.—' The S. Sie- 
versii, Ledeb. Fl. Alt. 2. 394. does not appear to me distinct 
from this. o: El 2 -g 
50. S. linearis, Benth. in Wall. Pl. As. Rar. 1. 66.—Com- 
mon in the Himalayan range. 
51. S. grossa, Benth. in Wall. l.c. 1. 67.—Syen range, in 
Sirmore, a district of the Himalaya. LH 
52. S. rivularis, Wall.—Benth. in Wall. 1. c. 1. 66.— Cash- 
mere, TET ^d d Ue Zi 
53. S. scandens, Don, Prod. Fl. Nep.—S. angulosa, Benth. 
in Wall. 1. c. 1. 67.—Common at Mussooree and in the Hi- 
malayan range. AA AOS JE Dot 
94. S. cana, Wall.—Benth. in Wall. l.c. 1. 66.—Mus- 
sooree and Syen range. 2 
55. Marmoritis* rotundifolia, (Benth.); foliis petiolatis re- 
niformibus crenatis rugosis utrinque tomentoso-lanatis, caly- 
cibus tomentoso-pubescentibus.—Kanaour.—A small plant, 
having much the habit of the cut-leaved Dracocephali, and in 
some measure that of Lamium amplexicaule. The flowers 
are in axillary verticillastri, shorter than the petioles of the 
leaves. The corolla is shorter than the teeth of the calyx. - 
56. Nepeta linearis, (Royle); caulibus adscendentibus gla- 
briusculis, foliis sessilibus linearibus acutiusculis integerrimis 
basi angustatis utrinque viridibusglabris, spica ovata pauciflora, 
bracteis lanceolato-subulatis, calycis elongati dentibus lan- 
- 
.* Manmwonmrs, Benth, Calyx 13-15-nervius, infundibuliformi-campanu- 
latus, profunde quinquedentatus, dentibus zqualibus, acutis. Corolle tubo calyce 
breviore, labio superiore erecto, bifido, plano, inferioris lobis lateralibus erectis, medio 
Patente suberenulato. Stamina 4, adscendentia, didynama, inferioribus brevi- 
oribus. Anthere biloculares, nude, loculis subparallelis. Stylus breviter bifidus, 
lobis Subzqualibus, subulatis. Stigmata minuta, terminalia. E Achenia sicca, ls- 
via, nuda, ; TUAM LIT r es 
Marmoritis, Nepeta (including Glechoma) and Dracocephalum, TOR tmi 
groupe in the tribe of Nepetea, distinguished by the upper stamina being the long- 
est instead of the shortest, as they are in most Labiate ; a distinction first pointed 
Sut to me by Professor Agardh, in 1830. 
