> 



ICO SAND RIA POLYGYNIA. 



5ri 



DALIBARDA. 



Calyx 5 -fid us. Petala 

 Styli 5--S, lonjj;!, de- 



Cdlyx 5 cleft 



Pdals 



5. 



cidui. 



5, 



Stifles 5-8, long, de- 



Bacca sicca. 



ciduous. Berry dry. 



1. 



Lob ATA. 



Bald. 



I). pilosH ; foliis subro 



Hairy; leaves nearly 



tundis, cordatis, lobatis, I round, cordate, 



f 



crenatis, ciliatis 



caule 



sub-nudo 



mulnfloris. 



> 



peduiiculis 



B. 



Jobed, 

 stem 



crenate, ciliate ; 

 somewhat naked ; pedun- 

 cles many flowered. 



Root fibrous, perennial. Stem ei-ect, not exceeiVing five inches in 

 height, supporting a few small, entire, lanceolate leaves. Peduncle 

 generally many floweret!, erect, umbelliform, with leafy involucrums. 

 Flowers yellow The leaves slia,htly but uniformly three lobed, 

 and the whole plant more or less cloathed with a coarse pubescence* 

 Bald. ^ ; ' 



Grows on the hilla on eacli side of Flint River, Georgia, near the 



Creek Agency. 

 Flowers April — May. 



« 



S. 



FuAGARIOlDES. 



Mich. 



D.foliis ternatis ; foliolis 



Leavef5 tern ate 



leaf. 



cuneatis, crenato-lobatis ; lets cuneate, crenate and 



pedunculis multifloris. 



lobed 



flowered. 



> 



peduncles many 



Mich. 1. p. 360, t. 28. Pursh. 1. p. 530. 



Boo? perennial. 

 wie root. 



Stem creeping. Leaves arising from the crown of 



inches high, 



S — 6 flowered, 



Commoa petiole 2 — 4 inches long; leaflets nearly fitting, 

 cuneate at base, rounded at the summit, slightly lobed. The whole 

 plant hairy. Common peduncle 4 — 6 



^•■ing small lanceolate leaves at each division. Segments of the 

 calyx expanding. Filaments persistent. Petals yellow. 



wows in the mount&ins of Carolina and Georgia. 



Flowers May— June. Pureh. 



I 



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V' 



