CRYPTOGAMIA. ALG. Lichen. K. Foliage Lra- 69 
“THER-LIKE. 
Dicks.’b. «Dill. 28. 109-—Hoffm. lich: 6. 9-Fl. dan. 115: 
— 1+Mich. 44. 3. 5—Dill, 28. 110. a 
At first small, circular, flat on the ground; when older 
raised up; 1 or 17 inch over, oblong or egg-shaped, border 
divided into a few segments, but irregularly and obliquely. Sur- 
face greenish, grey or brown when dry; white and brown 
variegated underneath, with large veins, thick, woolly, brown, 
dividing at the extremities. Root at the base of the - leaf, 
wedge-shaped, short. Targets at the end of the lobes, sitting, 
concave or convex, circular, horizontal, dark brown purple, 
Moist rocks under shady brows in several parts of Glenkill _ 
Linn, and Glenkill Burn, in the parish of Kirkmichael, Dum- 
friesshire. Dr. Burcess iz Fl. Scot. 844. Moistish stones and 
rocks about Dunkeld, Scotland. P. Jan.—Dec. 
L. Tubercles purple, or red brown, terminating: foliageaptho'sus. 
a green, changing. to brown, sprinkled with warts, >“ 
Tobes blunt, not veined underneath. oe 
Hoffm. lich. 6. 1-Dill. 28. 106—-F/. dan. 767. 1-Facq. cell. 
iv. 17. : 
Broader, shorter, thinner, and less brittle than the L. ca- 
ninus. Segments large, flattish, bluntly notched. Surface 
_ smooth, fine green when young, grey brown when old. Warts 
‘Numerous, scattered, blackish. Tubercles terminating, fine 
purple, or red brown, egg-shaped, crooked, warty, on short 
pedicles. Roots very long. Horrmay. Black brown underneath, 
woolly, not veined, whitening when exposed to the air; with- 
out radical fibres, Dri. ‘ ; 
. _ Shady, stony, mossy places, and on rocks. Dartmoor, De- 
vonshire. Ingleborough, Yorkshire; elsewhere in Yorkshire 
and Westmoreland. Huns. At the foot of the Pentland Hills, 
Scotland. Mr. Yaupen ix the Fl. Scot. 847, P. Jan.—Dec.* 
L, Tubercles reddish brown, terminating: foliage dullrufes’cens, 
green, deeply lobed ; lobes blunt, the edges bent . 
inwards, underneath woolly and with black fibres. | 
Facg. coll, iv, 15—Dill, 27. 103-—Mich. 44. ord. 12. 2 
Leaves thicker, stiffer, smaller, narrower, and deeper cut 
than in the L. caninus; the edges curled, the colour darker, not s 
veined underneath, or very superficially so. Dit. In the _ 
’ 
* The country people make an infusion of it in milk, and give it 
to children that have the Thrush. In large doses it operates by purging 
and vomiting, and destroys worms. pis 
