42 FUNGTJS-ILOEA. 



Cortinarius {Telanwnioi) plumiger, Fries, I^Epicr., p. 294 ; 

 Cke., Hdbk., p. 266. 

 In woods. 



Cortinarius (Tela.) scutulatus. Fr. 



Pileus about 1 in. across, fleshy at tlie disc, margin thin, 

 ovate then expanded, obtuse, purple-umber, brick-red when 

 dry, at first silky and white near the margin, Ihen becoming 

 broken up into squamules ; gills adnate, about 2-3 lines 

 broad, rather distant, purple-violet ; stem 3-4 in. long, ^ in. 

 thick, somewhat bulbous, rigid, dark violet outside and 

 inside, solid, peronate and more or less ringed ; spores 

 elliptical, 7 x 3 ;«,. 



Cortinarius (Telamonia) scutulatus. Fries, Epicr., p. 294 j 

 Cke., Hdbk., p. 266 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 820a. 



In damp woods, &c. 



Smell like that of radishes, stem above the bulb, which is 

 often wanting, cylindrical j apex often hollow, hence the 

 fleshy disc of the pileus becomes umbilicate. Teil sometimes 

 concentrically squamulose, sometimes almost absent, mem- 

 branaceous ring obsolete. Edge of gills at first whitish 

 then cinnamon. (Fries.) 



Cortinarius (Tela.) evernius. Fr. 



Pileus 2-4 in. across, thin, almost membranaceous, conico- 

 campanulate then expanded, obsoletely umbonate, everywhere 

 covered with a white, fibrillose, silky, adpressed veil, usually 

 purple-bay when glabrous, very hygrophanous, brick-red 

 when dry, becoming dingy pale ochraceous when old, cracked 

 and torn into fibrils, very fragile ; the very thin flesh 

 similarly coloured ; gills adnate, ventricose, very broad 

 (J-1 in.), distant, purplish-violet, becoming pale, at length 

 cinnamon ; stem 3-6 in. long, i in. and more thick, equal or 

 attenuate downwards, slightly striate, violet, becoming pale,, 

 obsoletely squamulose and indistinctly annulate from th'* 

 veil; spores elliptical, granular, 10 x 7 /a. 



Cortinarius (^Telamonia) everaiwa, Fries, Monogr., ii. p. 77; 

 Cke., Hdbk., p. 266 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 821 and 865. 



In damp pine woods, &c. 



Smell not remarkable, resembling C. elatior in size, but 

 not in any way allied, differing in the absence of the 

 glutinous veil and also in colour. (Fries.) 



