612 The Turaee and Outer Mountains of Kumaoon, [June, 



named, being in no degree scandent, though Don asks " an potius volu- 

 bilis !" Mr. Bentham's name, " angulosa," is very appropriate and should 

 be substituted. So S. repens is an erect shrub, and requires an epithet 

 expressive of its numerous stems and branches. Many Himalayan 

 plants bear evidence that they were named by persons who never saw 

 them. Rosa macrophylla, for example, has not large leaves; they are 

 much smaller than those of the common R. Brunonis. 



Begonia tenella, (not dioica.) 



Clerodendron fcetidum. 



Phryma leptostachya, common in woods. 



Mazus surculosus. 



Vandellia nummularifia. 



Veronica biloba and Maddenii (n. s. Edgeworth.) 



Torenia cordifolia. 



Datura alba. 



Solanum rubrum. 



Goldfussia pentstemonoides. 



Erigeron semibarbatum. 



Erigeron Roylei, " Murchmool. 3 ' (Not Aster bellidifolia.) 



Inula nitida. 



Conyza veronicsefolia. 



Diplostephium Roylei. 



Carpesium pubescens. 



Oreoseris gossypina, from 1 500 to 8000 feet, (not Onoseris lanugi- 

 nosa*) 



Senecio rufinervis, (not canescens.) 



Senecio spectabilis, (not Jacobsea.) 



Senecio alata, on Cheenur, but rare. 



Amphirapis cuspidata. 



Amphirapis pubescens. (Solidago nepalensis, Don.) 



Echenais ferox, probably the Cnicus verutus of Don. It grows 

 from 4500 to 7500 feet, and is found up to Paoree in Gurhwal, and 

 probably much further. If it is Don's plant, it also inhabits Nepal 

 " ad Narainhetty," a spot in the vicinity of Kathmandoo, where per- 



flowers opening yellow in the morning but becoming light blue by the afternoon ; 

 an example of natural Daguerreotype. 



