LABIATE. (MINT FAMILY.) 349 



11. SATUREIA, L. Savory. 



Calyx bell-shaped, 10-nerved, equally 5-toothed, naked in the throat. Corolla 

 2-lipped; the upper lip erect, flat, nearly entire, the lower 3-cleft. Stamens 4, 

 somewhat ascending. — Aromatic plants, with narrow entire leaves, often clus- 

 tered, and somewhat spiked purplish flowers. (The ancient Latin name.) 



1. S. hoktensis, L. (Summer Savory.) Pubescent annual ; clusters few- 

 flowered ; bracts small or none. — Prairies of Illinois, and rocky islands at the 

 Falls of the Ohio, Short: escaped from gardens. (Adv. from Eu.) 



12. CALAMINTHA, Mcench. Calaminth. 



Calyx tubular, 13-nerved, mostly hairy in the throat, 2-lipped; the upper lip 

 3-cleft, the lower 2-cleft. Corolla with a straight tube and an inflated throat, 

 distinctly 2-lipped ; the upper lip erect, flattish, entire or notched ; the lower 

 spreading, 3-parted, the middle lobe usually largest. Stamens 4, mostly ascend- 

 ing; the anthers usually approximate in pairs. — Perennials, with mostly pur- 

 plish or whitish flowers; produced all summer: inflorescence various. (Name 

 composed of KaAoy, beautiful, and fiivda, Mint.) 



§ 1. CALAMfNTHA, Mcench. Calyx striate, scarcely gibbous at the base: clusters 

 of flowers loose and peduncled in the axils of the leaves, and forming a raceme at 

 the summit : bracts minute. 



1. C. Nepeta, Link. (Basil-Thyme.) Soft hairy; stem ascending (1°- 

 3° high) ; leaves petioled, broadly ovate, obtuse, crenate ; corolla (3" long) about 

 twice the length of the calyx. — Dry hills, Virginia, &c. (Nat. from Eu.) 



§2. CALOMELtSSA, Benth. Calyx nearly as § 1 : whorls few - several-flow- 

 ered, sessile ; flowers on slender naked pedicels ; the bracts at their base linear or 

 oblong, leaf like. 



2. C. glabella, Benth. Smooth ; stems diffuse or spreading (l°-2° long) ; 

 leaves slightly petioled, oblong or oblong-linear, narrowed at the base (8" -2' 

 long), sparingly toothed, or nearly entire ; clusters 6 - 10-flowered ; corolla (pur- 

 plish, 5" -6" long) fully twice the length of the calyx, the teeth of the latter 

 awl-pointed. ( Cunila glabella, Michx. Micromeria, Benth.) — Limestone banks, 

 near Frankfort, Kentucky (Short), and southward. 



Var. Nuttallii, Gray. Smaller; the flowering stems more upright (5' -9 

 high), with narrower mostly entire leaves and fewer-flowered clusters; while 

 sterile runners from the base bear ovate thickish leaves only 2" -5" long. (C. 

 Nuttallii, Benth. Micromeria glabella, var. angustifolia, Ton.) — Wet limestone 

 rocks, Niagara Falls to Wisconsin, Central Ohio (Sullivant), and sonthwestward. 

 — Appearing very distinct, but united by southwestern specimens. 

 § 3. CLINOPODIUM, L. Calyx more or less gibbous beloio : clusters sessile and 

 many-flowered, dense, avwded with awl-shaped bracts. 



3. C. Clinop6dium, Benth. (Basil.) Hairy, erect (1°- 2° high) ; leaves 

 ovate, petioled, nearly entire; flowers (pale purple) in globular clusters; hairy 

 bracts as long as the calyx. (Clinopodium vulgare, L.) — Borders of thickets 

 and fields. Naturalized extensively : but apparently also indigenous about the 

 upper Great Lakes. (Eu.) 



