IT4 CALYCIFLOR^ 



often o ; partial several, unequal. (Name from the Latin, cicuta, 

 a Hemlock stalk.) 



7. Apium (Celery). — Fruit roundish egg-shaped, of 2 almost dis- 

 tinct carpels, each with 5 slender ridges ; bracts 0. (Name, the 

 Latin of this or some allied plant.) 



8. Petroselinum (Parsley). — Fruit egg-shaped ; carpels each 

 with 5 slender ridges ; general bracts few ; partial many. (Name 

 from the Greek, petros, a rock, and selinon, parsley.) 



g. Helosciadium (Marsh-wort). — Fruit egg-shaped or oblong; 

 carpels each with 5 slender, prominent ridges ; general bracts ; 

 partial several. (Name from the Greek, helos, a marsh, and skiadion, 

 an umbel.) 



10. SisoN (Stone Parsley). — Fruit egg-shaped ; carpels with 5 

 slender ridges ; petals broad, deeply notched, with an inflexed 

 point ; bracts both general and partial, several. (Name, the Greek 

 for some allied plant.) 



11. ^GOPODiUM (Gout-weed). — Fruit oblong ; carpels with 5 

 slender ridges ; bracts 0. (Name in Greek signifying goafs-foot, 

 from some fancied resemblance of the leaves.) 



12. Caeum (Caraway). — Fruit oblong ; carpels with 5 slender 

 ridges ; general bracts o, or rarely i ; partial 0. (Name from Caria, 

 a country of Asia Minor.) 



13. CoNOPODiuM (Earth-nut). — Fruit oblong, crowned with the 

 conical base of the erect styles ; carpels with 5 slender, blunt ridges ; 

 general bracts o ; partial few. (Name from the Greek, konos, a cone, 

 and pous, a foot.) 



14. PiMPiNELLA (Burnet Saxifrage). — Fruit oblong, crowned with 

 the swollen base of the reflexed styles ; carpels with 5 slender ridges, 

 and furrows between ; general bracts 0, or rarely i ; partial 0. (Name 

 of doubtful origin.) 



15. SiUM (Water Parsnip). — Fruit nearly globose ; carpels with 

 5 slender, blunt ridges ; bracts, general and partial, several. (' ' Name, 

 according to Theis, from the Celtic word siw, water." — Sir W. J. 

 Hooker.) 



16. BuPLEURUM (Hare's-ear). — Fruit oblong ; carpels with 5 pro- 

 minent ridges, crowned at the flat base of the styles ; partial bracts 

 very large. (Name from the Greek, bous, an ox, and pleuron, a rib, 

 from the ribbed leaves of some species.) 



Umbels compound ; fruit not flattened, not prickly, nor beaked 



17. CEnanthe (Water Dropwort). — Fruit egg-shaped, cylindrical, 

 crowned with the long straight styles ; carpels with 5 blunt, corky 



