PEZIZA. 45 
Name—Acetabulum, vinegar cup; shaped like a cup. 
Sand Hutton, Yorkshire (Rev. M. Budstone). King’s 
Cliffe, Northamptonshire ; Kingerswell, Devonshire (Rev. 
M. J. Berkeley). Pitlochrie and Cluny, N.B. (D. 
Thomson). Wiltshire (Mr. C. E. Broome). Hitchin 
(Professor Henslow). White Notley (Mr. A. Irvine). 
Ashton Court, Bristol (Mr. C. Bucknall). Framingham 
Earl; Sprowston; Castle Rising, Norfolk! (Mr. C. B. 
Plowright). General Cemetery, Shrewsbury! near 
Ludlow (Miss Price). 
2. Peziza imsolita. Cooke. 
Stipitate, fleshy, fragile, whitish, clavate, then pyriform, 
becoming cyathiform; stem thick, attenuated below; 
hymenium ochery-white; asci cylindrical; sporidia 8, 
elliptic, hyaline, 22—25 x 10—12u; paraphyses filiform, 
short, septate. 
Peziza imsolita—Cooke, “ Mycogr.,” fig. 375. 
On decayed leaves amongst mould in a fig-house. 
December. 
Cup 1 inch high, $ an inch or more in diameter; 
cells of cups 12 x 10u; the paraphyses shorter than the 
asci. A white mycelium runs amongst the leaves on 
which it grows (Cooke). 
Name—Jnsolita, unusual. 
Castle Gardens, N.B. (Rev. J. Stevenson). Kelvedon, 
Essex (Dr. M. C. Cooke). 
8. Peziza Percevali. Berk. and Cooke. 
Solitary ; cup at length expanded, somewhat pruinose. 
the margin closely inflexed ; stem somewhat thick, sub- 
attenuated below, with slender rooting fibrils; asci 
clavato-cylindrical; sporidia elliptic (?); paraphyses 
thickened above, brownish. 
Peziza Percevali.Berk. and Cooke, “Mycogr.,” fig. 
192. Peziza ciboriwum—Fries, “Sys. Myco.,” ii. 59 (partly), 
var. major ; B. and Br. in “Ann. Nat. Hist.,” No. 1479 
“ Grevillea,” iii. p. 119. 
On the ground. 
