PEZIZA, 73 
Cup } an inch to 14 inches broad. The flesh is thick 
and rather firm; the exterior of the cup coarsely fur- 
furaceous, dark sooty-brown, but pale towards the 
subcrenate margin. It is gregarious, and sometimes 
ceespitose. The apices of the paraphyses are filled with 
brown granules. 
Name—Pustula, a blister; having convex elevations 
like blisters. 
Ercall Hill, Salop! Glamis (Rev. J. Stevenson). 
40. Peziza indiscreta. Phil. and Plow. 
Scattered or crowded, sessile, hemispherical, fleshy ; 
hymenium concave, blackish-brown; externally some- 
what verrucose, umber-brown ; asci cylindrical ; sporidia 
8, elliptic, 1 to 2-guttulate, asperate, 16—18 x 9—10n; 
paraphyses linear, septate, slightly thickened at the 
apices, 
Peziza indiscreta—Phil. and Plow., “ Grevillea,” viii. 
p: 99. 
On the earth under lime-trees, 
Cup 4 to 7 lines broad. 
Name—Indiscretus, not distinguished, or resembling 
many others. 
North Wootton, Norfolk! (Mr. C. B. Plowright), 
Cc. SPORIDIA, ELLIPTIC, SMOOTH. 
41. Peziza vesiculosa. Bull. 
Cup large, entire, sessile, at first globose, somewhat 
vurbinate, then expanded and campanulate; hymenium 
pallid-brown; margin connivent, somewhat crenate ; 
externally furfuraceous; asci cylindrical; sporidia 8, 
elliptic, smooth, 20—22 x 124; paraphyses linear, en- 
larged upwards. 
Peziza vesiculosa—Bull, “Champ.,” t. 457, f. 1, 
Fries, “Sys. Myco.,” ii, 52; Grev., “Se. Crypt. Flo.,” 
t. 107; Sow., t. 4; “Eng. Flo.,” v. p. 188; Kickx., “Flo. 
Flan.,” 494; Karst. “Myco. Fenn.” p. 52; Cooke, 
