FIRST GRAND DIVISION, 

 PILENOGAMIA, OR FLOWERING PLANTS. 



Plants consisting of a regular axis of growth with leafy appendages 



compcsed, of a cellular ', vascular I^B uyieous structure; 



developing flowers and pryUmg seeds. 



SUBDIVISION FIRST. 



EXOGENS, OR DICOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS. 



STEM composed of distinct bark and pith, with an intervening layei 

 of woody fibre and vessifs.^ GROWTH by annual, concentric, exter- 

 nal zones or layers. LEAVES mostly with reticulated veins, and fall- 

 ing off by an articulation. SEPALS and PETALS in 5s and 4s much 

 oftener than in 3s. EMBRYO with 2 opposite, or several whorled 

 cotyledons. 



CLrASS I. ANGIOSPERMS. 



OVULES produced within an OVARY and fertilized by the pollen 

 through the medium of the PISTIL, 'becoming SEEDS enclosed in a 

 PERICARP. EMBRYO with two opposite cotyledons. 



SUBCLASS I. POLYPETAL.E. 



Floral envelops usually consisting of both calyx and corolla, the 

 latter composed of distinct petals. 



ORDER I. RANUNCULACEJE. CROWFOOTS. 



Herbs, with an acrid, colorless juice. 



Leaves mostly alternate and much divided, with half-clasping petioles. 



Calyx. Sepals mostly 5, sometimes 3, 4 or 6, mostly deciduous, andimbricated in aestivation. 



Coroila. Petals 315, hypogynous, sometimes irregular or 0. 



Stamens 00, distinct, hypogynous. Anthers, adnate or innate. 



Ovaries 00, rarely solitary or few, distinct, seated on the torus. 



Fruit either dry achenia, or baccate, or follicular. 



Embryo minute, at the base of horny or fleshy albumen. 



Genera 41, specios about 1000 (Lindley), mostly natives of cold, damp climates. Europe is supposed 

 to contain one fifth of the species, North America one-seventh. India one-twenty-fifth, South America 

 one-seventeenth, Africa very few, and New Holland but 18. 



Properties. Almost all the genera contain an acrid juice highly prejudicial to animal life, but easily 

 decomposed and deprived of its activity by a heat of 212 deg. They also lose their poisonous qualities in 

 drying. This order is rich in ornamental cultivated plants. 



