224 AGARICACE^E Cortinarius 



1029. C. salor Fr. (from its greyish colour, like the sea, salum] a b. 

 P. convex, obtuse or broadly umbonate ; mid. grey ; marg. 



violaceous or steel-grey. St. attenuate upwards, white, when 

 young covered with bluish gluten. Co. forming an imperfect 

 Z. G. emarginate or adnate, distant, grey or cinnamon. 

 Woods. Oct. 3 X 3f X f in. 



1030. C. delibutus Fr. (from the besmeared gluten ; ddibiio, to 



besmear) a b. 



P. convexo-flat or subdepressed, light yellow. St. stuffed or 

 hollow, attenuate upwards, white, sometimes pale steel-blue 

 above. Co. forming an imperfect Z. G. adnate, slightly 

 emarginate or subdecurrent, subdistant, serrulate. 



Taste watery to slightly pungent. On the ground, damp grassy places. 

 Sept.-Oct. 2| x 3f X T 5 5 in. 



1031. C. illibatus Fr. (from the gills, the margin entire, not serrulate, 



as in the last ; illibatus, entire) a. 



P. convexo-plane, obtuse or subumbonate, yellow ; mid. darker. 

 St. stuffed or hollow, slightly attenuate above, white, often red- 

 dotted upwards. G. adnato-decurrent, crowded. 



Woods, pine. Autumn. i X 2& x T 3 g in. Smaller and more slender than 

 1030, with no trace of violet colour. 



1032. C. stillatitius Fr. (from the dripping gluten ; stillo, to drip) a b. 

 P. convexo-plane, subumbonate, hygrophanous ; mid. tan-grey ; 



marg. steel-grey and appendiculate with gluten. St. hollow, 

 attenuate upwards, steel-grey with gluten. Co. forming an 

 imperfect Z. G. emarginate, subdistant. 



Odour none. Mossy places, pastures, amongst dead leaves ; uncommon. 

 Oct. 2\ X 3^ X | in. 



1033. C. vibratilis Fr. (from a fancied tremulous habit; vibratilis, 



quivering) a b. 



P. piano-gibbous, hygrophanous, shining golden-yellow. St. 

 stuffed, attenuate upwards, whitish. Co. forming a glutinous 

 fugitive Z. G. emarginato-decurrent, thin, crowded. 



Taste and odour disagreeable. Woods. Sept. if X if X J in. 



1034. C. pluvius (from its viscidity in rainy weather ; pluo, to rain) a 

 P. convexo-gibbous, hygrophanous, pale yellow-tawny ; marg. 



striate. St. stuffed to hollow, nearly equal, naked, obsoletely 

 viscid, white. G. adnexed, crowded. 

 Taste watery, then acrid-pungent. Woods, pine. Sept.-Nov. ijx2xin. 



SUBGENUS 3. INOLOMA. 



(From the fibrillose or fringed veil ; Gr. is, inos, a fibre, 

 loma, a fringe.) 



Veil single, fibrillose. Pilens equally fleshy, dry, subcompact, at 

 first silky with innate scales or fibrils, becoming smooth, flesh 



