88 
Sepals with a very short projecting point. 
Flowers large, blackish-purple ; leaves mostly 3-5 
inches wide ; their segments with numerous teeth. 
phe’um. 
Flowers small, pinkish; leaves rarely over an inch 
wide, their segments with about 3 (or 5) teeth. ) 
rotundifollium.” 
Sepals with a slender, bristle-like point. 
Lobes of leaves with few divisions, hairs few, lying flat~ 
f on the surface; sepals tapering towards the 
L point. columbinum. 
Leaves with spreading hairs or soft down; sepals 
bluntish below the bristle-point. 
Flowers about 3 inch across; petals narrow, hairy at 
base on surface and margins ; fruit-stalks | 
Nee Nae 
(mostly) erect. sylvat/icum. 
-Flowers over 1 inch; petals hairy below at margins 
only; fruit-stalks mostly bent down. 
praten'se. 
GEH'UM. 
Flowers small, yellow; fruits in a head which is not 
f raised above the calyx. } 
L urbanum. Avens. MLE 
Flowers purplish-brown; head of fruits raised on a stalk, gs 
above the calyx. lov 
rivale. Water dee 
GNAPHA’LIUM (with FILA’GO). 
Bracts surrounding the flower-heads without hairs ;~ 
[ flowers dull-red. J 
L G. lu'teo-album. Fersey Cudweed. 
Bracts hairy below; flowers yellow or brownish. 
Leaves dark-green, not cottony on their upper surface ; 
flower-heads in the angles of the leaves on the | 
stem. G. sylvat'icum.- 
Leaves grey and cottony on both surfaces. 
a3 lower-heads much exceeded by the leaves round. 
The larger leaves much narrowed near their base, 
suddenly pointed ; outer bracts blunt. 
G. uligino’sum. 
“Leaves scarcely narrowed, tapering to the point ; 
outer bracts pale, with longish points. 
L (See) Fila’go. 
Heads scarcely exceeded. (See) Fila’go. 
