WEEDS AND U-SEFUL PLANTS. 



Oh3. The root of the Water Avens is tonic and powerfully astrin- 

 gent, and is used as a popular remedy in diarrhoea, dyspepsia, &c. A 

 decoction is made and taken with sugar and milk in the same manner as 

 coffee, * 



6. POTENTILXA, L: Cinquefoil. 



[Latin, pofe?i8, powerful ; in reference to supposed medical properties.] 



Cahjx 5-cleft, with an external bract at each cleft, thus appearing 10- 

 cleft. Petals mostly 5. Stamens numerous. Style lateral or terminal, 

 deciduous. Akenes numerous, often rugose, capitate on a dry persistent 

 villous receptacle. Seed suspended ; radicle always superior. Herbace- 

 ous or suffruticose. Leaves pinnately or palmately compound. 



1. ?. E'orve'g'ica, L. Hirsute ; stem erect, dichotomous above ; leaves 

 palmately 3-foliolate, the cauline ones on short petioles ; leaflets obovate- 

 oblong, the uppermost lanceolate, coarsely and incisely serrate ; pedun- 

 cles axillary, cymose at summit and leafy ; petals shorter than the 

 calyx ; akenes rugosely ribbed or striate. 



Norwegian Potentilla. 



Root annual. Stem. 1-2 feet tiigli, rather stout. Leaflets 1-3 inches long; common 

 petioles 1-4 inches long ; stipules large (often an inch or more in length) . Floiuers often 

 "numerous, in leafy cymes at summit, and on long solitary peduncles below — ^the lower 

 peduncles often opposite the leaves. Petals yellow. 



Pastures and roadsides : Northern States. Native of Lapland, Norway, and Northern 

 America. Fl. July -August. Fr. September. 



Obs. This is said to be a native in the Northern States, and British 

 America, — but it has very much the appearance of an introduced plant, 

 — and has not yet, so far as I know, acquired a common name. It is 

 only entitled to the notice of the farmer, as being a coarse, homely, 

 worthless intruder in his pasture fields. 



2. P. Canaden'sis, L. Villous ; stems procumbent and ascending ; 

 leaves palmately 5-foliolate ; leaflets cuneate-obovate, incisely serrate- 

 dentate near the apex ; peduncles axillary, solitary, elongated ; petals 

 longer than the calyx ; akenes somewhat rugose. 



Canadian Potentilla. Cinquefoil. Five-finger. 



Eoot perennial. Stem 2 or 3-12 and 18 inches long, slender, somewhat branched, often 

 several from the same root. Radical leaves on petioles 2-6 or 8 inches long ; stem leaves 

 nearly sessile : leaflets half an inch to 1-2 inches long. Fedumles about as long as the 

 leaves. Petals j- ellow. 



Old neglected fields ; borders of woodlands, &c. Canada to Georgia. Fl. April -June, 

 f^-. June -August. 



Ob$. The P. simplex, of authors, is no doubt properly ^ egarded as only 

 a variety of this. Both varieties are rather harmless, though worthless ; 

 and are merely indicative of a poor soil, or a thriftless farmer. Some 

 lands, when kept as pasture fields, seem to have an almost incurable 

 tendency to lose the valuable Grasses^ and to become speedily overrun 



