262 CONNECTICUT GEOL. AND NAT. HIST. SURVEY. fBuU. 



Geranium pusillum Burm. f. (very small). 

 Small-flowered Geranium or Cranesbill. 



Rare. In lawns and grasslands: New Haven (Harger), 

 Bridgeport (Eames), Monroe (H. C. Beardslee), Litchfield 

 (Miss E. H. Thompson). June — July. Adventive from 

 Europe. 



Geranium dissectum L. (finely cut). 

 Cut-leaved Geranium or Cranesbill. 



Rare. Oxford, in newly seeded ground (Harger). June. 

 Fugitive from Europe. 



Geranium molle L. (soft). 



Dove's-foot Geranium or Cranesbill. 



Rare. Lawns and cultivated ground: Southington (An- 

 drews), Stratford (Mrs. R. H. Russell), Bridgeport (Eames), 

 Litchfield (Miss E. H. Thompson). May — June. Fugitive 

 from Europe. 



ERODIUM L'Her. Storksbill. 



Erodium cicutarium (L.) L'Her. (like Cicuta, the Poison Hem- 

 lock). 



Storksbill. Heron's-bill. 



Rare. Waste ground: New London (Graves), Norwich 



(Mrs. E. E. Rogers), Glastonbury (Mrs. F. W. Starmer), 



Bridgeport (Miss A. E. Carpenter), Norwalk (G. P. Ells). 



May — June. Fugitive from Europe. 



Erodium moschatum (L.) L'Her. (smelling of musk). 

 Musk Erodium or Storksbill. 



Rare. Hartford, in waste grounds (H. S. Clark). Sept. 

 Fugitive from Europe. 



RUTACEAE. RUE FAMILY. 



ZANTHOXYLUM L. Prickly Ash. 



Zanthoxylum americanum Mill. 



Northern Prickly Ash. Prickly Ash. Toothache Tree. 



Thickets, fence-rows or open fields, often in rocky ground. 

 Rare in the southeastern part of the state, becoming occa- 

 sional northward and westward and frequent in Litchfield 



