BELLIS. INULA. 203 



. E. uniflorum (Sm. not L.) has a shorter and more erect ray 

 and a rather more hairy involucre. E. B. 2416. Highland 

 mountains. P. VII. VIH. S. 



6. (15.) EEL'LIS Linn. Daisy. 



1. S. peren'nis (L.) ; 1. obovate-spathulate crenate-dentate. 

 E. E. 424. St. a short procumbent rhizome producing 1. 

 only at its end. Stalks simple, each bearing a single head. 

 Sometimes all the fl. are ligulate ; rarely all are tubular. Banks 

 and pastures. P. III. X. E. S. I. 



7. (9.) SOLIDA'QO Linn. Golden Eod. 



1. S. Virgaurea (L.) ; st. erect slightly angular, 1. lanceolate 

 narrowed at both ends, lower 1. elliptic stalked serrate, raceme 

 erect simple or compound, phyll. lanceolate acute, fr. downy. 

 E. B. 301. E. xvi. 911. St. usually 13 feet high, leafy, 

 nearly simple, ending in a long cluster of yellow heads. /3. an- 

 gustifotia (Gaud.) ; 1. all lanceolate [entire or obscurely serrate]. 

 y. S. cambrica (Huds.) ; st. 2 6 in. high, 1. ovate-lanceolate, 

 heads larger. Woods and thickets, y on mountains. P. VII. 

 -IX. E. S. I. 



8. (6.) LINOST'EIS Cand. Goldilocks. 



1. L. vulgdris (Cass.) ; herbaceous, 1. linear glabrous entire, 

 heads corymbose, iuv. lax. Chrysocoma Linosyris L. E. B. 2505. 

 Aster Linosyris (Bernh.). St. 12 18 in. high, simple, leafy. 

 L. single-ribbed, smooth or rough, very many, more or less 

 dotted. Fl. yellow. Limestone cliffs, rare. P. VIII. IX. E. 



,. Tribe IV. Inulea. 



Heads never dioecious. Fl. of ray female or neuter, ligulate, 

 in one row, or wanting ; of disk perfect, tubular. Anth. with 

 slender tails. Style-branches broadened upwards and rounded, 

 L. alternate. 



9. (10.) TNTJLA Linn. 



\\. 1. HeUnium (L.) ; outer phyll. ovate, inner obovate, 1. un- 

 equally dentate downy beneath cordate-ovate acute clasping, 

 root-1. stalked elliptic-oblong, fr. quadrangular glabrous. Sy. 

 E. B. 766. St. 34 feet high, round, furrowed, solid, leafy, 

 branched above. Heads few together or solitary, terminal, very 



