44 RANTJNCULACE.E. (CROWFOOT FAMILY.) 



7. MYOSUEUS, Dill. Mouse-tail. 



Sepals 5, spurred at the base. Petals 5, small and narrow, raised on a slen- 

 der claw, at the summit of which is a nectariferous hollow. Stamens 5 - 20. 

 Achenia numerous, somewhat 3-sided, crowded on a very long and slender 

 spike-like receptacle (whence the name, from pvs, a mouse, and oipd, a tail), 

 the seed suspended. — Little annuals, with tufted narrowly linear-spatulate 

 root-leaves, and naked 1 -flowered scapes. Flowers small, greenish. 



1 . M. minimus, L. Carpels blunt. — Alluvial ground, Illinois and 

 Kentucky, thence south and west; apparently indigenous. (Eu.) 



8. ISOPYRUM, L. (Enemion, Raf.) 



Sepals 5, petal-like, deciduous. Petals 5, minute, wanting in the American 

 species. Stamens 10-40. Pistils 3-6 or more, pointed with the styles. Pods 

 ovate or oblong, 2 - several-seeded. — Slender smooth herbs, with 2 - 3-ternately 

 compound leaves; the leaflets 2-3-lobed. Flowers axillary and terminal, 

 white. (Name from iVos, equal, and nvpos, wheat; of no obvious application.) 



1. I. bitematum, Torr. & Gray. Petals none; pistils 3-6 (commonly 

 4), divaricate in fruit, 2-3-seeded; seeds even. 1J. — Moist shady places, Ohio 

 to Illinois, Kentucky, and westward. May. — Fibres of the root thickened here 

 and there into little tubers. Aspect and size of the plant much as in Thalictrum 

 anemonoides. 



9. CALTHA, L. Marsh Marigold. 



Sepals 5-9, petal-like. Petals none. Pistils 5-10, with scarcely any styles. 

 Pods (follicles) compressed, spreading, many-seeded. Glabrous perennials, 

 with round and heart-shaped or kidney-form, large, undivided leaves. (Name 

 from Kakados, a goblet, in allusion to the golden flower-cup or calyx.) 



1. C. pallistris, L. (Marsh Marigold.) Stem hollow, furrowed; 

 leaves round or kidney-shaped, either crenate or nearly entire ; sepals broadly 

 oval (blight yellow). — Swamps and wet meadows, common northward. April, 

 May. — This well-known plant is used as a pot-herb in spring, when coining 

 into flower, under the name of Cowslips ; but the Cowslip is a totally dif- 

 ferent plant, namely, a species of Primrose. The Caltha should bear with us, 

 as in England, the popular name of Marsh Marigold. (Eu.) 



10. TKOLLIUS, L. Globe-flower. 



Sepals 5-15, petal-like. Petals numerous, small, 1 -lipped, the concavity 

 near the base. Stamens and pistils numerous. Pods 9 or more, sessile, many- 

 seeded. — Smooth perennials with palmately parted and cut leaves, like Ra- 

 nunculus, and large solitary terminal flowers. (Name thought to be derived 

 from the old German word troll, a globe, or something round.) 



1. T. laxus, Salisb. (Spreading Globe-flower.) Sepals 5-6, 

 spreading; petals 15-25, inconspicuous, much shorter than the stamens. — 

 Deep swamps New Hampshire to Delaware and Michigan. May. — Flowers 

 twice the size of the common Buttercup ; the sepals spreading, so that the 



