]58 SUMMER FLOWERS. 



(123) Tordylium — fruit with a thickeued and wrinkled margin ; 



vittse 1-3 togetlier. 



§§§§ Fi'uit glohose, the cartels scarcely separating. 



(124) Coriandrum — fruit globose; carpels with the primary 



ridges obsolete, the four secondary conspicuous, promi- 

 nent, keeled ; interstices without vittse. 



XX Alhumen furrowed, or involute on tJie inner face. 

 § Fruit short, turgid. 



(125) Conium — fruit ovate, laterally compressed ; carpels with 



five prominent wavy or crenate ridges, the lateral mar- 

 ginal ; interstices striated ; vitta? none. 



(126) Smyrnium — fruit laterally compressed ; carpels reniform- 



oblong, with three dorsal prominent sharp ridges and two 

 lateral marginal nearly obsolete ones ; interstices with 

 many vittaD. 



§§ Fruit ohlong. 

 II Fruit with an evident heah ; (vittce none.) 



(127) Seandix — fruit with a very long beak ; carpels with five 



obtuse ridges. 



(128) Anthriscus — fruit with a short beak ; carpels without 



ridges, the beak five-ridged. 



III! Fruit not heahed. 



(129) ChserophyUum — fruit not beaked ; carpels with five equal 



obtuse ridges ; interstices with single vittae. 



(130) Myrrhis — fruit not beaked ; carpels covered with a double 



membrane, the outer with elevated keeled ridges hollow 

 within, the inner close to the seed ; vittse none. 



ff Fruit pricTcly. 



(131) Torilis — fruit slightly laterally compressed ; carpels with 



three dorsal bristly primary ridges, the secondary hidden 

 by the numerous prickles which occupy the interstices. 



