No. 14.] FLOWERING PLANTS AND FERNS. 24I 



Rocky woods, thickets and more open places. Rare near 

 the coast and in the southwestern part of the state; frequent 

 elsewhere. Late June — Sept. 



Agrimonia mollis (Torr. & Gray) Britten (soft). 

 Agrimonia pubescens Wallr. ( ?) 

 Soft Agrimony. 



Occasional or frequent. Dry woods, thickets and more 

 open places. July — Aug. 



Agrimonia parvifiora Ait. (small-flowered). 

 Small or Many-flowered Agrimony. 



Rare. Fairfield, edge of wet meadow (Eames), South- 

 bury, roadside (Harger, Bissell), Salisbury (Mrs. C. S. 

 Phelps). Aug. 



Agrimonia rostellata Wallr. (having a little beak). 

 Agrimonia striata Bicknell, not Michx. 

 Woodland Agrimony. 



Dry rich or rocky woods. Occasional in the southern part 

 of the state, extending northward as far as Middletown and 

 Southington (Bissell). July — Aug. 



SANGUISORBA L. Burnet. 

 Sanguisorba canadensis L. 



Poterium canadense Gray. 



Canadian, Wild or Great American Burnet. 



Locally plentiful along the borders of tidal marshes and 

 about fresh-water swamps and streams near the coast; also 

 occurs in low grounds along the Farmington River in Windsor 

 (H. S. Clark), Farmington (Bissell), and Simsbury (A. W. 

 Driggs) ; and has been collected at Berlin (J. N. Bishop). 

 Mid- July — mid-Oct. 



Sanguisorba minor Scop, (smaller). 

 Poterium Sanguisorba L. 

 Sanguisorba Sanguisorba Britton. 

 Garden or Salad Burnet. Bloodwort. Bibernel. Pimpernel. 



Toper's-plant. 



Rare. Monroe, in dry rocky ground (H. C. Beardslee). 

 July — Sept. Fugitive from Europe or Asia. 



Formerly cultivated as a salad plant. 



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