36 RAN'U>*CULACE^. (CROWFOOT FAMILY.) 



•*- *- Stems climbing : leaves pinnate : calyx (and foliage) glabrous or puberulent. 



3. C. Viorna, L. ^Leather-flower.) Calyx ovate and at length bell- 

 shaped ; the purplish sepals very thick and leathery, tipped with short recurved points ; 

 the long tails of the fruit very plumose; leaflets 3-7, ovate or oblong, sometimes 

 slightly cordate, 2-3-lobed or entire; uppermost leaves often simple. — Rich 

 soil, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and southward. May - Aug. 



4. C. Piteheri, Torr. & Gray. Calyxbell-shaped ; the dull purplish sepals 

 with narrow and slightly margined recurved points ; tails of the fruit filiform and 

 barely pubescent ; leaflets 3-9, ovate or somewhat cordate, entire or 3-lobed, much 

 reticulated; uppermost leaves often simple. — Illinois on the Mississippi, and 

 southward. June. 



5. C. cylindrica, Sims. Calyx cylindraceous below, the upper half of 

 the bluish-purple sepals dilated and widely spreading, with broad and wavy thin 

 margins ; tails of the fruit silky ; leaflets 5 - 9, thin, varying from oblong-ovate 

 to lanceolate, entire or 3 - 5-parted. — Virginia near Norfolk, and southward. 

 May - Aug. 



* * Flowers in panicled clusters, polygamo-dicecious : sepals thin : anthers oblong. 



6. C. Virginiana, L. (Common Virgin's-Bower.) Smooth; leaves 

 bearing 3 ovate acute leaflets, which are cut or lobed, and somewhat heart-shaped 

 at the base ; tails of the fruit plumose. — River-banks, &c, common ; climbing 

 over shrubs. July, August. — The axillary peduncles bear clusters of numerous 

 white flowers (sepals obovate, spreading) ; the fertile succeeded in autumn by the 

 conspicuous feathery tails of the fruit. 



2. ANEMONE, L. Anemone. Wind-flower. 



Sepals few or many, petal-like. Petals none, or in No. 1 resembling abortive 

 stamens. Achenia pointed or tailed, flattened, not ribbed. Seed suspended. — 

 Perennial herbs with radical leaves ; those of the stem 2 or 3 together, oppo- 

 site or whorled,«and forming an involucre remote from the flower. (Name from 

 avf/xos, the wind, because the flower was thought to open only when the wind 

 blows.) 



§ 1. PULSATILLA, Tourn. Carpels numerous in a head, with Jong and hairy 

 styles which in fruit form feathery tails, as in Clematis : flower large, usually with 

 some glandular bodies like abortive stamens answering to petals, but minute or 

 indistinct. 



1. A. patens, L., var. Nuttalliana. (Pasque-flower.) Villous with 

 long silky hairs ; flower erect, developed before the leaves ; which are ternately 

 divided, the lateral divisions 2-parted, the middle one stalked and 3-parted, 

 the segments deeply once or twice cleft into narrowly linear and acute lobes ; 

 lobes of the involucre like those of the leaves, at the base all united into a shal- 

 low cup; sepals 5-7, purplish or whitish (1'- 1|" long), spreading when in full 

 anthesis. (A. Nuttalliana, DC. Pulsatilla Nuttalliana, ed. 2. P. patens, var. 

 Wolfgangiana, Trautv.) — Prairies, Illinois (Bebb), "Wisconsin (Lapham), thence 

 northward and westward. March -April. — A span high. Tail of carpels 2' 

 long. (Eu. Siberia.) 



