HANDBOOK OF I'.RITISH liEPAIIC/t. I03 



i;rcicilc, of cqiKil width throuL^hout, and from the 

 convexity of the leaves looking Hkc strini^s of small 

 beads. These have a silky lustre, and are usually 

 of a briijht pink or claret colour, but sometimes 

 pale <^reen. The leaves are vertical, unsymmetri- 

 cal, cordate, broader than long, very convex, con- 

 duplicate, gibbous posteriorly, with the margin 

 indexed and tumid, bicornute, the ventral tooth 

 not continuous with the border, but arising at 

 some distance within it, segments long and curved 

 liked the horns of an ox. The axillary leaves are 

 cordate-lanceolate, and have only one tooth, while 

 in the perichcetial leaves there are two shorter 

 dentate segments. The texture is thin and silky, 

 the areola: quadrate, discrete, surrounded by a 

 pellucid border. 



Cephalozia Francisci, Hook. 



Stem rather erect, somewhat branched, 

 leaves incumbent, ovate, acutely emarginate ; 

 perichaitial leaves everywhere imbricate ; sti- 

 pules ovate, bifid; perianth terminal on lateral 

 branches, oblong-cylindrical. 



Jungermannia Francisci^ Hook. Br. Jung. 

 No. 49; Eng. Bot. t. 2569; Mack. Hib. II., 

 64 ; Gott. and Rab. Exs. 503 ; Cooke Hep. f. 

 90. Cephalozia Francisci, Dum. Rev. Jung. p. 

 18; Lind. Journ. Linn. Soc. XIII., 191; 

 Carr. and Pears. Exs. No. 176, 177; Spruce 

 Cephalozia p. 49. 



