40 Mr. Tuckerman, on some Plants of New England. 
commonly also brown. Our plant agrees with original specimens 
of Wahlenberg’s variety, and of the C. Gebhardi of Hoppe. 
Koch adopts Persoon’s name, citing for Wahlenberg’s only the 
Flora Suecica, but this last was first published in the Monograph 
of the illustrious Swede, which appeared before the Synopsis of 
Persoon.—(7.) Mountains; White Mountains, Green Mountains, 
&c. Also in swamps, Phippsburg, Me., Nuttall; Penn Yan, 
New York, Dr. Sartwell. This differs still more from the true 
C. canescens than even the variety 6. The form and important 
_ characters of the fruit seem however to forbid a separation of 
‘ In y. I have observed the color of the fruit to be always 
1. The latter variety does not probably occur in Europe ; 
ms, it I think it passes into the former on our mountains. That this 
species is the true C. canescens of Linneus, independently of 
the descriptions, is the opinion of Wahlenberg, Fries; Koch, and 
Torrey & Gray. The unanimous opinion of the great bota- 
nists of Sweden, with respect to a Linnzan Swedish plant, 
would seem perhaps to be of more weight than even the Lin- 
nan herbarium ; a contrary opinion has however prevailed. 
C. neeiecta, (mihi): spica composita, spiculis 3-4 subrotundis 
remotiusculis paucifloris inferne masculis, stigmatibus 2, perigyniis 
oblongo-lanceolatis plano-convexiusculis enerviis in rostrum con- 
‘spicuum scabriusculum margine ciliato-serratum integrum acu- 
minatis squama acuta hyalina 8 mene culmo tenui erec- 
tiusculo scabro. 
Hab. Rocky hills, near Moutpelies Vt., 1839. This plant has 
the peculiar habit of inflorescence of C. trisperma, by which it 
is distinguished from the variety of C. canescens. In the fruit 
it differs very much from C. trisperma. The stem in my ticks 
mens is very scabrous. 
C. riera, (Gooden.): spica mascula solitaria, hucidecie 2-4 
erectis inferiore pedunculata oblongis, stigmatibus 3 abortu seepius 
2, perigyniis ellipticis obtusis nervosis obscure trigonis punctulis 
minutis conspersis rostro brevi tereti integro mucronatis, culmo 
angulis scabriusculo s. glabro. EK. T.—C. rigida, Gooden. in 
Linn. Tr. 2, 193, Koch. Syn. p.755, Boott. in Hook. Bor. 
Amer. 2,217. C. saxatilis, Willd. Sp. 4, 275, Wahlenb. Lapp- 
p. 247, Torr. Cyp. p. 397, Kunth, Cyp. p. 411, Drej. Rev. p. 
41, (non Linnzi, test. Hartman in Koch, Gosdetiongh; et Boott ; 
ee Linneana (in Fl. Lapp.) ut mihi videtur, ipsa. )— 
