490 ICOSANDRIA. FOLYGYNIA. rubu?, 



lower pedicels. Segments of the calyx lanceolate, acute. 

 Petals obovate, while, twice as long as the calyx. Fruit large, 

 black, sweet. 

 Hab. In stony and barren fields. May — June. Deivberry, 



9. Bi/' odoratus L. : unarmed, erect, viscidly-hispid ; 

 leaves simple, acute, 3 — 5-lobed ; corymbs terminal, divari- 

 cate; calyx appendiculate : petals neai'ly round. fViUdc 

 Spec. II. p. 1083. Bot. Maii\ 323. 3Ii 1 1. ico7i.223. Mich, 

 FL I. p. 207. Pursh Ft. I. p. 348. Big. Boit. p. 123. 

 Elliott S/c. I. p. 570. Bart. FL Am. Sept. II. t. 42. 



A shrub 3—4 feet high, branched, pubescent and hispid. Leaves 

 very large, 3-lobed^ cordate ; the lateral lobes sliglitly cleft ; sti- 

 pules subulate. Flowers nearly 2 inches in diameter, in loose 

 spreading corymbs. Calyx covered with brownish viscid haiis ; 

 segments ovate, terminating in a long point, which is some- 

 what leafy at tiie extremity. Petals roundish, bright-purple. 

 Fruit large, honey-yellow, Avell-flavoured, but small in quantity. 



Hab. In rocky woods and on mountains. New-England to Ca- 

 rolina. June. Flo-ivering Raspberry, 



* * Somewhat herbaceous, 



10. R. saxatilis $. canadensis Mick. : herbaceous, pu- 

 ■bescent ; stems creeping; leaves ternate ; leaflets rhombic, 

 acute, incisely dentate, naked ; the terminal one petiolate ; 

 flowers somewhat in threes; pedicels elongated. Mich, 

 J'/. I. p. 29C. Pwrs/i F/. l.p. 349. Elliott Sk. I. T^, 

 590. 



Fruit smallj black- F/i. 



Hab. On mountains. New- York to Virginia. Purs/!. 



1 1. R. ohovalis M i c h. : stem becoming a little woody, 

 hispid with stiff hairs ; leaves ternate ; leaflets round-obo- 

 vate, seriate, naked; stipules setaceous; racemes subco- 

 rymbed, few-flowered ; bracts ovate ; peuiceis elongated. 

 M i c h. FL I. p. 298. Pursh FL I. p. 349. Elliott 

 Sk. I. p. 590. 



Fruit with only a few large grains, black and sweet. P/z. 

 Hab. In sphagnous swamps on the mountains. New- York to 

 Carolina. Pursh. May — July. 



This appears to be scarcely distinct from R. trivialis. 



12. R. Chamamorus L. : herbaceous, small; stem un- 

 armed, 1 -flowered, erect; leaves simple, subreniform, with 

 rounded lobes; petals oblong. Willd, .S;>ec. II. p. 1090. 

 Smith FL Brit. 11. p. 545. E?;-. Bot. I. 7 ! 6. M i c h, 

 FL I. p. 298. P ur s h FL I. p. 349. 



Flotvcrs white. Fruit yellow, or amber-coloured. 



Hab. On the high mountains of New-England. Purs h. 



