318 LXXV. COMPOSITE.  # ~ AsTER. 
lower ones long, lanceolate, veined, obtuse, upper short, narrow-linear; spike 
dense and thick, long and bracted below; Ads. numerous, cylindrical, sessile, 
5-flowered; scales appressed, with acute, scarious and colored squarrose tips.— 
Prairies, Il].! to Tex. A stout species, distinguished from L. spicata chiéhy by 
its acute, squarrose scales and few-flowered heads. Stem 3—5f high. Spikes 
cylindrical, 10—20' long. 
8. T. & G. (L. brachystachya. Nudt.) St. and invol. nearly glabrous. 
Section 2. Heads radiate. 
8. TUSSILAGO. 
Altered from the Lat. tussis, cough ; considered a good expectorant. ~ 
‘Heads many-flowered ; flowers of the ray 9, those of the disk 3; 
involucre simple ; receptacle naked ; pappus capillary.—% Lws..radi- 
cal. F'ls. yellow, with very narrow rays. 
_ T. Farrirs. Colt’s-foot. 
A low plant, in wet places, brook sides, N. and Mid. States, and is a cer- 
tain indication of a clayey soil. Scape scaly, about 5’ high, simple, appearing 
with its single, terminal, many-rayed, yellow head, in March and April, long 
before a leaf is to be seen. Leaves arising after the flowers are withered, 5—8! 
by 3—6’, cordate, angular, dentate, dark green above, covered with ‘a cotton- 
like down beneath, and on downy petioles. §? 
9. NARDOSMIA. Cass. 
Gr. vapdos, spikenard, ogpn, smell; from the fragrance of the flowers. 
Heads many-flowered, somewhat 2 dc; flowers of the ray Q, of the 
disk %, but abortive in the sterile plant ; involuere simple ; recep- 
tacle flat, naked ; pappus capillary—% Lvs. radical. F'ls. cyanic. 
The ray flowers of the sterile heads are in a single row ; of the fertile 
heads in several, but very narrow. 
N. paumita. Hook. (Tussilago. Ait.) 
Scape with a fastigiate thyrse or corymb; lvs. roundish-cordate, 5—7-lobed, 
tomentose beneath, the lobes coarsely dentate—In swamps, Fairhaven, Vt., 
Robbins. Sunderland, Mass., Hitchcock. W. to R. Mts. Very rare. A coarse, 
acaulescent plant, with large, deeply and palmately-lobed leaves, and a‘stout 
scape covered with leaf-scales and 1—2f high. The heads are fragrant, nume- 
rous, with obscure rays, those of the barren plants almost inconspicuous. May. 
Trise 3. ASTEROIDE. 
Heads radiate, rarely discoid. Branches of the style more or less flattened and 
linear, equally pubescent above outside. Leaves mostly alternate. 
Section 1. Heads radiate. Rays cyanic. 
10. ASTER. 
Gr. acrnp, astar; from the radiated flowers. : 
Involucre oblong, imbricate; scales loose, often with green tips, 
the outer spreading; disk flowers tubular, % ; ray flowers Q; in one 
row, generally few (6—100), ligulate, oblong, 3-toothed at apex, 
finally revolute ; receptacle flat, alveolate ; pappus simple, capillary, 
scabrous ; achenium usually compressed.—A large genus of % herbs, 
very abundant in the U. S., flowering in late summer and autumn. Los. 
alternate. Disk fis. yellow, changing to purple, ray flowers blue, purple 
or white, never yellow. . 
§ Scales imbricate, with appressed, greenish tips. Rays 6—15. Lower 
leaves cordate, petiolate. Heads corymbose. Biotia. DC. 
.1. A. corymposus. Ait. (Eurybia corymbosa. Cass.) Corymbed Aster. 
‘St. corymbose-fastigiate, smooth ; branches hairy; lws. ovate, acutely ser- 
