/i 



Oxypolis UMBELLIFERAE— CORNACEAE Cornus 



Oxypolis Raf. 



O. Canbyi (Coult. & Rose) Fern. (0. filiformis var. Caribyi 

 Coulter & Rose. See Rhodora 41, 139. 1939.) 



Meadows and bogs at EUendale (S), the only known locality 

 anywhere: Canhy, Aug. 1867 (A, D), Aug. 1874 (A), Aug. 1893 (D), 

 Aug. 1894 (D); Commons, 16 Aug. 1877 (A). 



O. rigidior (L.) Raf. 



Common in swampy ground, Piedmont, and southward to the 

 Virginia line. Aug., Sept. 



Angelica L. 



A. venenosa (Green way) Fern. {A. villosa (Walt.) BSP. See 

 Rhodora 45, 298-301, 1943.) Hairy Angelica. 



Frequent in rocky woods and dry, sandy soil of Cecil and New 

 Castle Counties; occasional farther south: damp woods near Chop- 

 tank Mills (K), Otis, 13 Aug. 1924 (A); woods east of Wattsville 

 (Ac), R. R. Tatnall, 4350, 10 Aug. 1939 (T). Mid-July to early 

 August. 



A. atropurpurea L. 



Infrequent in northern New Castle County. May, early June. 



Daucus L. Carrot. 



D. Carota L. Wild Carrot. 



Common weed in fields and waste places. July. Nat. from 

 Europe. ^* •• * ^ * 



CORNACEAE (Dogwood Family) 



Cornus L. Dogwood. 



C. florida L. Flowering Dogwood. 



Common in dry woods of the Piedmont, and southward to 

 Talbot and Sussex Counties; rare farther south: Cape Charles, s. of 

 Kiptopeke (No), Fosberg, 14634 (P). Late April, May. 



C. Amomum Mill. (C sericea of Gray's Man., ed. 7.) Silky 

 Dogwood. 



Frequent along streams and on pond margins of the Piedmont, 

 and on the Coastal Plain southward at least to Sussex and Talbot 

 Counties. June, early July. 



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