CATALOGUE OF PLANTS. 



SERIES I. 

 PH^ENOGAMOTJS OB FLOWERING PLANTS. 



38 T. DICOTYLEDONOUS OR EXOGENOUS PLANTS. 



DEB 1. RANUNCULACE2E. CROWFOOT Family. 

 Clematis, L. (Virgin's Bower — Traveler's Joy.) 



O. verticillaris, I"'. Along tin- Delaware River above Phillipsburg. 



O. Virginiana, L. Leaves divided into three parts ; the parts lance- 

 coarsely toothed, sometimes cut with deep incisions, or lobed ; 

 onally heart-shaped at the base. Flowers white. July to Septem- 

 ber. The stamens and pistils are borne on different flowers. Late in 

 autumn the plant pi emarkable appearance, the long, whitish, 



silky plumes in which the carpels terminate, make it resemble mas 

 wool thrown upon the low shrubbery over which the plant climbs, soine- 

 .e extent of thirty feet. 

 tat. — Aloi g - and rich damp hedge-rows. Scattered .-par- 



ingly throughout the State. Bears cultivation well, but is not thereby 

 improved in appearance. 



Anemone, L. (Wind-Flower.) 



A. Y:."_-iniana, L. Extremely rare. 



A . L. (Wind-flov. B I to be called wind-flower be- 



many of th Found in windy • This, ho 



is not especially I with A. nemoroaa, for it seems to delight in the 



■ 



low which is a whorl 

 of three trifolia- . d, pule underneath. I 



or purplisli, with : March t«» May. 



Middl- • 



Hepatica, Dill. f— Liverwort.) 



H. •:•;;..::!, Chaix. purple ; scapes hair; 



■ilky hairy — separated from tin 



