*MORPHA. XLVII. LEGUMINOSJi. 325 



T. VIRGINIANA. Pers. (Galega. Linn.} Goal's Rue. Cat-gvi. 



Ertt, villous; Ifts. numerous, oblong, acuminate; rac. terminal, subses- 

 sile ; Ug. falcate, villous. Tj. Plant 1 2f high, with beautiful white and pur- 

 ple flowers, found in dry sandy soils, Can., la., 111., S. to Flor. Stem simple. 

 Leaflets 15 27, 10 13" by 2 3", mucronate, straight-veined, odd one oblong- 

 obcordate, petiolules 1" long. Stipules subulate, \' long, deciduous. Flowers 

 large, in a dense, terminal raceme. Calyx very villous. Banner white, keels 

 rose-colored, wings red. Jl. 



14. PSORALEA. 



Gr. i//o)poAsoj, leprous or scaly ; alluding to the glandular dots. 



Calyx 5-cleft, campanulate , segments acuminate, lower one longest; 

 stamens diadelphous, rarely somewhat monadelphous ; legume as long 

 as the calyx, 1-seeded, indehiscent. % or h Often glandular. Lvs. 

 wirious. Stip. cohering with the base of the 'petiole. Fts. cyanic. 



1. P. FLORIBUNDA. Nll't. 



Canescent, much branched, destitute of glands ; Ivs. palmately 3 5- 

 ioliate ; If Is. oblong-obovate, varying to linear; slip, setaceous; rac. slender, 

 40 50-flowered, twice longer than the leaves ; pedicels as long as the flowers 

 and longer than the small, ovate, acuminate bracts ; vex. roundish ; leg. smooth. 

 Alluvial soil, III. Mead. ! and Ark. W. to the Rocky Mts. Stem 2 4f high, 

 the branches spreading. Leaflets 1 2' by 2 4", common petiole 1' long. 

 Flowers bluish purple, nearly as large (3" long) as in the two following. Jn. 



2. P. ESCULENTA. Ph. 



Hirsute, erect, branching ; Ivs. palmately 5-foliate, Ifts. lanceolate ; spike* 

 axillary, dense ; col. seg. lanceolate, a little shorter than the corolla ; leg. ensi- 

 form, beaked ; rl. thick and fusiform. 



8. (P. ESCULENTA. Nutt.) Nearly acaulescent; Ifts. oblong-obovate. Mo. 

 near the lead mines. Stem a few inches high. Leaflets 1 2' long, nearly 

 half as wide. Flowers pale blue. The root is about 1' diam., rather insipid, 

 but is eaten by the Indians, either raw or boiled. Jn. Jl. 



3. P. EGLANDULOSA. Ell. (P. melilotoides. Michx.} 



St. much branched ; Ifts. oblong-lanceolate, finely dotted with glands ; 

 spikes oblong ; bracts broadly-ovate, acuminate, and with the calyx hairy ; leg. 

 roundish, transversely wrinkled. Dry soils, la. ! to Ark. Slender, 2f high, 

 spreading. Leaflets 2 2' long, as wide, obtuse, longer than the petioles. 

 Flowers blue. Pods 2" diam. Jn. Jl. 



4. P. ONOBRYCHIS. Nutt. 



Pubescent; Ifts. ovate, acuminate; rac. elongated; col. much shorter 

 than corolla, teeth small, obtuse, equal ; leg. ovate, transversely wrinkled. 

 Low grounds and thickets. Western States ! Stem rigidly erect, nearly simple, 

 3 5f high. Leaflets 2 <*' ^ng, nearly as wide. Flowers small, pedicellate, 

 blue. Pods exceeding the c l.yx, rostrate. Jn. Jl.' 



A 3. AMORPHA. 



Gr. a, privative, ftop^rj, form ; alluding to the deficiencies of the corolla. 



Calyx subcampanulate, 5-cleft ; vexillum concave, unguiculate. 

 erect ; wings and keel ; stamens exserted ; legume oblong, some- 

 what curved at the point, scabrous with glandular points, 1 2- seeded. 

 Shrubs or half-shrubby American plants. Lvs. unequally pinnate, 

 punctate. Fls. bluish white, in tnrgate racemes. 



1. A. FRUTICOSA. 



Pubescent or nearly glabrous, shrubby or arborescent ; Ifts. 9 13, oval, 

 petiolulate, very obtuse, the lower pair remote from the stem ; col. teeth obtuse, 

 short, lower one acuminate and rather the longest ; leg. 2-seeded. A shrub or 

 small tree, 6 16f high, Wis. Laphaml to La. and Flor., W. to Rocky Mts 

 Leaves 3 5' long, leaflets about 1' by ', rather remote from each pther and 



