MATERIA MEDICA OF THE ANCIENT CHINESE. 79 
Cust. Med., p. 22 (21):—Fang feng exported in 1885 
from Tien tsin 2,319 piculs,—p. 44 (10), from Che foo 1,063 
piculs,—p. 2 (11), from New chwang 746 piculs. 
Amen. exot., 825 :—Bfj Ji, boofu f* fofu.  Ligusticum 
vulgare.—Ibid., ly BR Jy san bofu, vulgo jamma_ bofu. 
Apium littorale folio Aquilegi« pinguiore. According to 
Tang. [ Fl. jap., 117] this is Peucedanum japonicum. Comp. 
also infra, 133. 
So moku, V, 10 :-—BKj J Siler divaricatum. 
32.95 7H tu huo. P., XII, 25. V., CXXXIV. 
Pen king:—Tu huo, HE FE Kiang huo, Fe FH Kiang 
_— tsting, HE 5 1 Fohu kang shi che. The root is officinal. 
Taste bitter and sweet. Nature uniform. N on-poisonous. 
Pie lu:—Other name 3} # BE tu yao ts‘ao (self-moving 
plant). The tw huo grows in the river valleys of Yung chou 
[Mid Shen si, App. 424], also in Lung si [in Kan su, 
App. 216] and Nan yao [unknown, App. 232]. The root is 
dug up in the 2nd and 8th months and dried in the sun. 
This plant is not moved by wind, it moves only in still air, 
whence the above names [tu huo means self-moving]. 
Wu Pu [8rd cent.] calls it $8 FE 8 BH hu wang shi che. 
T'ao Huyg-K1nc :—The localities mentioned in the 
Pie lu all belonged in former times to the country of the 
Kiang (Tibetans, Kukonor, App. 131]. The drug ang 
huo Which is produced in those localities is smaller, full of 
~ Joints, succulent, and of a strong nature. That which comes 
ftom I chou [in Sz ch‘uan, App. 102], Pei tu [in Shan si, 
. App. 246], Si ch‘uan [in Kan su, App. 296] is called tu huo. 
ae . Way. 
It is of a whitish colour, larger. Both are used in the same 
