452 TRANS. OF THE ACAD. OF SCIENCE. 
27. J. repens, Michx. Fl. 1, 191; Cephaloxys flabellata, 
sv.; Chapm. Flor. 496; a well marked south-eastern spe- 
cies, found from Maryland, Canby, to Florida, Alabama, and 
iana; i as I ha i a 
Louisiana; it is atrue Ju ; have shown above, an 
hoop notwithstanding ns great ae nearly allied 
with the last species. Seeds obovate, somewhat pointed, 
pet 0.2 line long, and delicately lineola +. 
28. J. raucatus, E. Mey. Synops. gs bs 34; in Rel. 
Henk. 1, ae et in Led. Fl. Ross. 4, 228, exc, syn.; Kunth 
zomate ascendente stolonifero 5 caulibus (digi- 
us geo an cha floribus a Bi arto ponca ‘extus sas 
pedicellatis; sepalis ovatis, exterioribus acuminatis interiora 
obtusa subinde mucronulata zquantibus seu eis brevioribus ; 
staminibus 6 dimida sepala superant sats ovari m 
i equilongo squantibus, antheris late linearibus 
filamento multo longioribus; stigmatibus elongatis exsertis; 
ula obovata obtusa mucronata triloculari ; seminibus (ex 
Benet testa — oS ngis.—J. Menziesii, R. 
Brown ny ook. Fl. 2. 
Fro e Russian island of Unalaschka, Chamisso, to 
California Henke schscholtz, Do cites Coulter 808, Bo- 
lander, and on the Cascade Mountains, 49 deg., Lyall. —A 
very abbey aad much controverted plant, as distinct from 
J. castaneus. as it is from J. ensifolius and J. Mertensianus, 
these.—Eschscholtz’s spactineie "in Hb. Gey are say 13-5 
or sometimes exceeding, ~~ stem, at are usually late- 
are unequal, eads mostly engl, Saecies two or three, 
4 inch in diameter, composed of from 8 to 18 large (3 lines 
— saci ae remarkably broad and rough on the 
outside, chestnu rown or (in Coulter’s and fa specimens) 
en 
