POPULAR FLORA. 



149 



AveiiSa Geum. 

 Calyx bell-shaped or flattish, 5-cleft, and with 5 additional little lobes between. Petals B. Stamens 

 many. Pistils many in a head, making akenes, which are tipped with the style, remaining as a long, 

 naked or hairy tail. Perennial herbs: flowers single or somewhat corymbed. — In all our common 

 species the style is jointed and hooked round in the middle. 



* Upper and mostly hairy joint of the style falling off, leaving the lower and smooth portion, which 

 remains hooked at the end: flowers rather small: root-leaves mostly interruptedly pinnate ; stem- 

 leaves or lobes 3 to 6. Dry woods and fields. 



1. White Avens. Smoothish or downy ; petals white, as long as the calyx, akenes bristly, ff. album. 



2. Virginian A. Bristly-hairy, stouter than the last ; petals greenish-white, shorter than the calyx ; 



akenes smooth. G. Virginidnum. 



3. Yellow A. Rather hairy, large ; petals yellow, longer than the calyx. G. slriclum. 

 * * Upper joint of the style persistent and feathered with long hairs; flowers rather large, nodding. 



4. Water A. Root-leaves with a large and rounded-lobed end-leaflet, and some very small ones 



below ; stem-leaves few, 3-oleft or of 3 small leaflets ; petals not spreading, somewhat notched at 

 the broad summit, purplish. — Wet banks of streams. G. i-ivale. 



Cinquefoil. Potentilla. 

 Calyx open Or flat, 5-parted, and with 5 additional outside lobes alternate with the others, making 

 10. Petals 5. Stamens many. Pistils many in a head, on a dry receptacle, making seed-like akenes, 

 the styles falling off. 



* Leaves palmate. Herbs, with yellow flowers. 



1. NoKWAY Cinquefoil. Erect, coarse, hairy ; leaflets 3, obovate, cut-toothed. Fields. P. Norvigica. 



2. Canada C. Runner-like stems decumbent or spreading; leaflets 5, obovate-oblong; peduncles long, 



axillary, 1-flowered. Fields and banks. P. Canadensis. 



3. SiLVEKY C. Low, with spreading branches, white-woolly, as are the 5 leaflets beneath. P. argentea. 



* * Leaves pinnate. Herbs (except No. 5): receptacle of the fruit hairy. 



4. Silver-weed. Creeping, sending up leaves of 9 to 19 cut-toothed leaflets, besides little ones inter- 



posed, silvery-white beneath, and single long-stalked yellow flowers. Wet banks, N. P. Anserlna. 



6. Shrubby C. Shrub very bushy, 2° to 4° high; leaflets 5 or 7, crowded near the end of the short 

 footstalk, lance-oblong, entire, silky beneath ; flowers yellow. Bogs. P. fruticbsa. 



6. Marsh C. Stems ascending from a scaly creeping base; leaflets B or 7, crowded, serrate, lance- 

 oblong; flowers dull purple. Cold bogs, N. P.palislris. 



Bramble. Rvbus. 

 Calyx open, deeply 5-oIeft. Petals 5. Pistils many; their ovaries ripening into little berry-like 

 grains (or rather drupelets), making a kind of compound berry. — Rather shrubby or herbaceous pe- 

 rennials. 

 (i 1. RASPBERRY. Fruit falling from the dry receptacle, usually with the grains lightly cohering. 

 * Leaves simple, lobed: flowers large and showy: petals spreading. 



1. Purple Flowering-Raspberry. Bristly and clammy with odorous brownish glands ; leaves 



rounded, with 3 or 5 pointed lobes; flowers in a corymb, rose-purple; fruit flat. Rocky banks, 

 N. Fl. summer. R. odoratus. 



2. White Flowerinq-R. Like No. 1, but the flowers white and smaller. N. W. & cult. R. NuOcltnitt. 



