106 _NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
hairy pedicels, broadly obovoid, occasionally slightly decurrent 
on the pedicel, scarlet, very lustrous, marked by few large white 
dots, slightly pubescent at the ends, 1.8 to 2 cm long and 1.6 
to 1.8 cm in diameter, villose at the base of the little enlarged 
calyx with a deep narrow cavity pointed in the bottom, and 
erect and incurved often deciduous lobes densely villose on the 
inner surface; flesh yellow, dry and mealy, of good flavor; nut- 
lets four or five, placed above the middle of the fruit, broad and 
rounded at the apex, gradually narrowed to the base, rounded 
and slightly grooved on the back, 9 to 10 mm long and 5 to 6 
mm wide, the conspicuous hypostyle extending nearly to the 
base of the nutlet. 
A round-topped shrub 3 to 4 m high, with numerous stout 
erect stems and branches and slender slightly zigzag branchlets, 
light orange-green and thickly covered when they first appear 
with long white hairs, glabrous, light orange-brown, lustrous 
and marked by dark lenticels in their first autumn and light — 
brown the following year, and armed with straight or slightly 
curved dark red-brown shining spines 2.5 to 5 cm long. 
Roadsides and rocky pastures between Jordanville and Mud 
lake, on the headwaters of the Susquehanna river, Herkimer 
county; J. V. Haberer (no. 2450, type), June 16 and October 19, 
1907; Haberer, Dunbar and Sargent, September 28, 1912. 
This handsome shrub is named in memory of Edwin Hunt 
(1837-80), for many years professor of natural sciences in the 
Utica Free Academy, a successful teacher of botany and a care- 
ful and industrious student of the flora of central New York. 
Crataegus radians Sargent 
N. Y. State Mus. Bul. 122. 64 (1908). 
Rochester. 
Crataegus fulleriana Sargent 
Proc. Rochester Acad. Sci. IV. 111 (1903). 
Rochester. 
DILATATAE 
Crataegus dilatata Sargent 
Bot. Gazette XX XI. 9 (1901) ; Silva N. Am. XIII, 113, t. 672; N. Y. State 
Mus. Bul. 105. 63 (1906). 
Thompsons lake near Albany, Gansevoort; also New England 
and Province of Quebec. 
