My 
Geology and Natural History. 815 
— Hastingsia, p. 217, nor under the species, H. alba, p. 242 
ut an appropriate reference is made on p. 286. __ 
eucocrinum, Nutt., was conjectured by Endlicher to be the 
great painstaking, are thirty-six in number, exclusive of the intro- 
duced A. vineale. 
living plants, such especially as those furnished by the so-called 
“crests of the ovary.” In A. stellatum these crests are remarka- 
tive to bees. The flowers are proterandrous. 
Separating the two species of Maianthemum we should have 
unhesitatingly referred the large Pacific coast form to Mf 
bifoli: We should not have distinguished Lilium Gray? as 
more than a form of Z. Canadense, one which extends northward 
to the central parts of New York. In view of geographical 
of fe size, and general appearance, we should never have thought 
of Uvularia flava as a synon of U. grandifiora. Mr. Watson 
finds good characters in the s ape and markings of the capsule to 
. grandiflora from U. perfoliata, Has auy one ripe » 
fruit of the small, yellow-flowered, U. flava ? 
Chamelirium Carolinanum, Willd. 
7 m idl 4 A 
trum luteum of Linneus), the blossoms being white without a 
tinge of yellow, duller white in the female plant, pure white in 
the male, the pedicels equally of this color. 
