CRYPTOGAMIA. ALG. Lichen. H. Herbaceous. 59 
camore, and oak in the N, W. of Devonshire. Frequently 
growing on the same trunk with L. herbaceous, lacinatus, and 
nigrescens. Mr, Newserry. Garn Dingle, and woods about 
Garthewin, Denbighshire. Mr, Gairriru.] P. Jan.— Dec, 
L. Saucers brown red, bordered: leaves lead-coloured, plum beus. 
bluntly lobed ; blue and spongy. underneath. 
_ Dicks. b. s-E. bot. 353—Lightf. 26, at p. 826~Hoffm. enum, 
21, 2-Dill, 24, 73-Mich. 43, ord. 23.1. 
__ Leaves, the edges and woollinefs on the under-surface blue. 
Huns. Leaves when dry ash-coloured or yellowish white, and 
in long preservation the blue spongy hairs turn white: they fre- 
quently extend beyond the edge of the leaves. Shields brownish 
red, small, scolloped when old, their brims of the colour of 
the leaves. Licurr, : 
L. caerulescens. Huds, p. 531. "Trunks of trees. Near Pen- 
tir and Bangor. Dirt. About Bradford, Yorkshire. About 
Drumlanrig, and in Barntimpenn Lign, about five miles from 
Moffat. Dr. Burcess ix Fi. Scot. [On the great island in 
Winandermere. Dr. J. E, Smrrn. On trunks of oak, ash, and 
elm, Devonshire, very common, Mr. Newszrey. Garn Din- 
gle, and about Llanrwst, common, Mr.Gairrirx.], 
. _ P. Jan-—Dec. 
L. Saucers dark brown red 5 foliage black green, mem- saturni ‘hus. 
_. branaceous, Jobes rounded, woolly and ash-coloured_ 
underneath, > oad : 
| Dicks, 6,8, 
Leaf depressed, somewhat plaited, slightly wrinkled above, 
of a bluish or brownish blackish hue, very woolly underneath. 
Saucers scattered, reddish or brown; border of the same colour. 
ICKs. : ; é a 
Trunks of trees, Scotland. [At Craigy Hall, near Edin- 
burgh. Mr. Brown.] a ; 
L, Saucers pale flesh-colour, terminating ; foliage white, nivalis, 
ascending, jagged, curled, pitted, smooth: the 
edges raised, ee, fae 
Fi, dan. 297 —F i, lapp, 11. 1-Dill. 21, 56, é =i 
Rarely found in fruit. Linnaus describes the saucers as 
mentioned above, but they are not expressed in his figure, nor in 
that of the Fl, danica, Dillenius examined great quantities of 
this Lichen, and found only minute dots like tubercles on the 
extreme edges of the segments, of a light reddish colour, ‘These 
may be the rudiments of the saucers mentioned by Linnzus._ 
Rocks in Scotiand.. On Ben Lawers. Dicks. iii, 17, [On 
many mountains near Invercauld, not uncommon. Mr, Brown. } 
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