184 AGARICINI. 



520. Coztinarius (Dermocybe) cinnaznomeus. Fr. "Cin- 



namon Cortinarius." 



Pileus fleshy, thin, obtuse, umbonate, cinnamon-brown, silky 

 with innate yellowish fibrils, or sqiiamulose, at length becoming 

 smooth ; stem stuffed, then hollow, thin, equal ; flesh and veil 

 yellowish ; gills adnate, broad, crowded, shining. — Fr. Epicr.p, 

 288. Kro77ihh.t.71,f. 12-15. Letell.t. 662. Bolt. t. 156. Sow.t. 

 205. Vars. Eng. Fl. Y.p. 88. 3Iag. Zool. ^ Bot. no. 49. 



In woods. [United States.] 



Pileus 1-2| in. broad, convex, or even obtusely conical when young, be- 

 coming nearly plane, obtusely umbonate, deep reddish-cinnamon, often 

 cracking at the margin, which is thin and sometimes fibrillose, smooth, 

 somewhat fleshy ; flesb yellowish; gills numerous, adnate, yellow cinnamon, 

 broad, margin often notched ; stem 2-3 in. high, 2-4 lines thick, equal, 

 fibrillose, yellow, solid, hollow in old plants. — Grev. 



(Fig. 4A, reduced.) 



521. Cortinarius (Dermocybe) uliginosus. BerTi. "Bog 



Cortinarius." 



Pileus campanulato-conical, then expanded, bright red brown, 

 very strongly umbonate, silky, sometimes streaked, flesh yellow- 

 olive, then cinnamon; stem flexuous, paler than the pileus; gills 

 distant, adnate with a tooth, yellow, then olive, then cinnamon. 

 — Berk Outl. p. 191. 



In boggy woods amongst Sphagnum. King's Cliffe. 



Pileus not exceeding 2 in. in diameter, of a beautiful red brown (almost 

 brick-red), and remarkable for its very strong but scarcely acute umbo. — 

 M. J. B. 



522. Cortinarius (Dermocybe) raphanoides. Fr. "Olive 



Cortinarius." 



Olivaceous, then discoloured ; pileus fleshy, campanulate, then 

 expanded, gibbous, silky with innate fibrils ; stem stuffed, firm, 

 fibrillose, opaque, and veil paler ; gills adnato-ventricose, rather 

 crowded, olivaceous then cinnamon. — Fr. Epicr. p. 290. Mich. 

 t.l6,f.2? Eng. Fl.Y. p. SS. 



In beech and fir woods. Scotch Highlands. 



Pileus 2 in. broad, when moist brownish-olive, when dry yellowish-olive, 

 convex at first, then expanded. Gills broad, darker, adnate, or emarginate ; 

 stem 3 in. high, 4 lines thick, subascending, fibrillose, villous at the base. — 

 Fries. 



