62 TWENTY-SIXTH REPORT ON THE STATE MUSEUM. 
violaceous, then cinnamon; stem solid, silky-fibrillose, tapering ° 
upwards, concolorous, violaceous at the top; spores .0003 x .00025 
in. 
Plant 2—3' high, pileus 1—2' broad, stem 2’—3” thick. ° 
Ground in woods. Croghan and New Scotland. September 
and October. 
Cortinarius (Inotoma) moprstus Peck. 
Pileus convex or expanded, subfibrillose, even or slightly rugose- 
wrinkled, alutaceous; lamelle close, nearly plane, pallid, then 
cinnamon; stem bulbous, subfibrillose, hollow, or with a white 
pith, concolorous; flesh white ; spores .00033 x .00025 in. 
Plant 2’ high, pileus 1’-1.5’ broad, stem 2” thick. 
Ground in woods. Croghan. September. 
It is distinguished from the preceding species by its paler color, 
more bulbous stem and by the entire absence of violaceous tints 
in the lamelle. 
Cortinarius (TELAMoNIA) LignaRiIus Peck. 
Pileus smooth, hygrophanous, dark, watery-cinnamon when 
moist, paler when dry; lamelle close, thin, concolorous, when 
young concealed by the copious white webby veil; stem equal, 
silky-fibrillose, hollow or with a whitish pith, subanuulate, with a 
dense white mycelium at the base; spores .00028 x .0002 in. 
Plant subceespitose, 1—2' high, pileus 8’-12” broad, stem 1” thick. 
Rotten wood. Catskill mountains. June. 
_ Cortinarius Ttorvus /7?. 
Ground in woods. Maryland and Worcester. July. 
Cortinarius (TELAMONIA) NIGRELLUS Pech. 
Pileus at first conical, then convex or expanded, obtuse or sub- 
umbonate, minutely silky, hygrophanous, blackish-chestnut when 
moist, paler when dry; lamelle close, narrow, emarginate, brown- 
_ish-ochre, then cinnamon; stem subequal, silky-fibrillose, pallid, 
often flexuous ; annulus slight, evanescent ; spores .00028 x .00016 
in. : 
Plant 2~3' high, pileus 1—2' broad, stem 2’—3” thick. 
Mossy ground in woods. New Scotland. October. 
When moist the pileus-has the color of boiled chestnuts, when 
dry, of fresh ones. The incurved margin of the young pileus is 
whitened by the veil. The lamellz are darkest when young. The 
taste is unpleasant, resembling that of Ag. melleus. 
