SYNGENESIA, £QUALIS. 93 
Easily known from all the preceding species by its being 
very hairy. In woods and shady places, and not unfrequently 
on the borders of fields. Common. Perennial. August, Sep- 
tember. 
304. KRIGIA. Gen, pl. 1244. ( Cichoracee.) 
Calix many-leaved, simple. Receptacle na- 
ked. Pappus double, external membrana- 
ceous 5 or 8-leaved, interior about 5, 8, or 
24 scabrous sete.— Vutt. 
t. K. small; leaves lyrate, glaucous, smoothish, Virsinica. 
margin ciliated; scape one-flowered, twice as 
long as the leaves ; calix about 8-leayed.—— Willd. 
and Pursh. 
Hyosceris Virginica, Sp. Pl. 1138. 
Icon. Lamark, Jour. Hist. Nat. 1. t. 12. 
About three or six inches high. Leaves and stem of a 
bluish-green. Flowers small, deep-yellow. On commons and 
road-sides; in pastures and fields, every where common. An- 
nual. May till July. 
eaulescent, dichotomous; leaves sub-spathutate- @. dichotome. 
linear, nearly entire, sparingly ciliate ; scapes 
numerous, long, one-flowered. B. 
Hyosceris? ramosissima, Bart. Prod. Fl. Ph. 75. 
Krigia dichotoma, Nutt. 
From ten to twelve inches high, very much branched from 
the root. Flowers yellow, and of the same size as in No. 1. 
After close attention to this plant, I believe it to be no more 
than a variety of the preceding, having found a few speci- 
mens this season, (1818,) approximating towards the diffuse. 
caulescent variety above. I have found this variety in the 
sandy fields of Jersey, opposite Southwark, and in Maryland 
on the road to Baltimore. Annual. July, August. 
2. H. glabrous, glaucous ; stem erect, in 2-3-divi- amrlexicaw 
_ sions, nearly naked; leaves glabrous, radical 
ones sublyrate, those of the stem amplexicaule, 
lanceolate, very entire, glabrous.——Pers. 
Q* 

