TAB. CCLXVI. 



BOLETUS SQUAMOSus. JVith. ed. o,. -t^i^. 



Perhaps one of the moft mutable of this tribe of 

 plants, whence it is called B. polymorphus by Bulliard, 

 /. 114. The moll curious is the branched variety, 

 figured in Phil. Tranf. abr. />/. 20./ 109. at p. 705. and 

 in Bolton, by the name of B. rangiferinus^ tab. 138. 

 Thefe both grew in cellars: mine was taken from 

 the bark of a tree at Willoughby, Lincolnfhire, by 

 Mr. Thomas Ordoyno. I have feen a fan-fliaped 

 variety growing in the Apothecaries Garden at Chel- 

 fea, full three feet wide. 



TAB. CCLXVII. 



HYDNUM AURiscALPiUM. Linn.Sp.Pl.xd^. 

 Hudf. 629. 



-T OUND moft frequently on the rotting cones of 

 Pinus fyhejiris^ or Scotch Fir ; fometimes on the Pine 

 leaves. It can by no means be a variety of H. imbri- 

 catum Linn, as Dr. Withering, after Linnaeus, hints. 

 Not to mention the place of growth, fize, and differ- 

 ence of ftru6lure, the fubftance is very different. 



TAB. CCLXVIIL 



LYCOPERDON aurantiacum. BuII.i']q. 

 With. ed. 3. 379. 



SOMETIMES found in clutters, often fmgly; and 

 in a young ftate it looks fomewhat like L. cervinum. 

 N. B. The little circle No. i. in the plate contains the 

 powder or feeds mixed with gum arable. 



