396 DECANDRIA. DIGYNIA. Saxifraga. 



i 



a few hairs at the edge, butoftener without. Fruitstalks many, 

 from the bosom of the leaves, of various lengths, the lower ones 



longest; generally with 1 flower.. Flo<wer-lea<ves 2 on each 

 fruit-stalk. Cups nearly as long as the blossom. Pet ah blunt, 

 yellow, spotted. Woodward. Mr. Afzelius informed me, that 

 the S. aizoides and the S. autumnalis of Linnaeus were both the 

 same plant; that when the leaves are fringed it had been called 

 by the latter, and when without fringe by the former name. 

 From the same authority also it may be observed that the Sy- 

 nonyms from Bauhine and Morison given to the S. autumnalis, 

 belong to the S. hirculus, as does also that of Breynius. 



Yellow Mountain Saxifrage* S. autumnalis. Huds. Lightf. 



Bot. arr. ed. ii. Ingleborough Hill, and in Westmoreland. 

 Beeston Castle, Cheshire; [and in Long Sledale and Whitsell 





Gill, near Askrig, Yorkshire. Curt. — In Furness Fells, near 

 the top of a high mountain called the Old Man; in moist places. 



Mr. Atkinson. J P. July, Aug. 



I 



(3) Leaves loled; stem upright. 



granula'ta. S. Stem-leaves kidney-shaped, gashed: stem branched: 



root beaded. 



Vicis. h. j.-E. lot. 50y-Kwpk. \-Curt. FL dan. 5U-M1U. 

 'ill.-Wood-v. VSQ-Ludw. \W-Walc.-Matth. 978-Fucls. 

 747-J. B. iii. Dod.;il6. \-Lob. obi. 335. 2-Ger. em. 

 841 . \-Park. 424. 1 and <2-H. ox. xii. $. 23-G/r. 6*93. 

 -l-Trag. b ( 15~Lonic. i. 220. 1 -Black™. 56, 



Root consisting of several tubercles crowded together. Ger* 

 men beneath, Linn. Branches without leaves. Cup a little 

 hairy. Blossoms white. 



White Saxifrage* Dry meadows and pastures. Near 

 Wandsworth. [Bevere, near Worcester. St. Plentiful in the 

 field below Malham Cove, Yorkshire. Wood behind Agecroft 

 Ball, and many other places about Manchester. Mr. Caley. 

 In the Garlick Meadows, near Penn's Mill, Erdington, War- 



wicksh.J 



P. Apr. June 



cer'nua. S. Stem-leaves hand-shaped, on leaf-stalks: stem un- 



branched, 1 -flowered, bulb-bearing. 



E. bot. 6()l-Fl. la pp. 2. 4-Fl. dan. 2Q. 



Flonxers rather nodding. Stem-Laves smooth, more hand- 

 shaped, and the gcrmeri more elevated above the receptacle than 

 in the S. bulbifera. In that plant too the stem is branched, and 

 bears more than I flower. Linn*. Very seldom flowering, but 

 always producing its axillary purple bulbs. Mr. Brown. Fh dan. 

 5£0| and Gun. norv. 8, 2, seem also to represent this species* 





