PATELLARIA. 86r 
Name—Lignum, wood; from the habitat. 
Bomere Pool, near Shrewsbury! near London (Mr. F. 
Currey). Oakley Park, Cirencester; Braydon Pool, 
Gloucestershire (Mr. Joshua). 
2. Patellaria Blozami. Berk. 
Gregarious, sessile, applanate, plane or convex, black, 
flesh blackish-brown, when old immarginate ; asci 
cylindraceo-clavate ; sporidia 8, elliptic, uniseptate, brown, 
10—15 x 5—8u; paraphyses numerous, filiform, adherent, 
slightly thickened and brown above. 
Patellaria Bloxami—Berk. in herb. Kew. 
On rotten wood. 
Cups about } to 4 a line broad. When young it has 
a very narrow margin. 
Name—After the Rev. Andrew Bloxam. 
Rev. A. Bloxam, without locality ! 
3. Patellaria olivacea. (Batsch.) F 
Sessile, applanate, between fleshy and waxy; ‘ex- 
ternally rugulose, olivaceous ; hymenium becoming black ; 
margin prominent, tumid, entire, becoming nearly yellow ; 
asci cylindrical; sporidia 8, elliptic or slightly turbinate, 
polari-guttulate, bluish-green, 9—10 x 4—5yu; paraphyses 
filiform, rather stout, septate, clavate at the summit. 
Peziza olivacea—Batsch, “El,” f. 51; Pers., “ Myco. 
Eur.,” p. 306; Fries, “Sys. Myco.,” ii. p. 142; B. and Br., 
“Ann. Nat. Hist.” No. 1077, t. 15, f. 22; Cooke, 
“Handbk.,” No. 2174. Rhizina nigro-olivacea—Curr., 
“Linn. Trans.,” xxiv. p. 494, t. 51, f. 10-12. 
On rotten willow. 
“Tt runs over the wood in an irregular manner, like 
the thallus of a Peltidea. In its young state it is truly 
Peziza-like, and very beautiful” (B. and Br.). Sporidia 
7°6 to 10u long. 
Name—Olwva, an olive; of an olive-green colour. 
Batheaston ! (C. E. Broome, Esq.). 
