AOii ,^1. TEKSDALIA XUDICAULIS. [CL. XV. 



Syiionymes and Figures. 



Pastoria bursa minor, Dodon. 103. Park. Theatr. 866. Mi- 

 nima, Lob. Ic. 221. Ger, em. 276. 



Bursa pastoris parva, folio glabro, J. Bauh. Hist. 2. 937. 



? Bursa pastoris media, Moris, sect. 3. 1. 20. {Nasturtium 

 j^etraum, Ger. Park. Tahern. Moris. y the plant more com- 

 monly identified with this is Lepidium petraeum.) 



Nasturtium minimum vernum, Magnoh Bot. Monsp. 186. 

 Tourn. Inst. 214. Formerly, however, he classed Nas- 

 turtium petrauin of his predecessors, with Pastoria bursa 

 minor. 



Iberis foliis pinnatis, Hall. Stirp. Helv. n. 521. 



Iberis nudicauUs, Linn. Fl. Suec. ed. 2. p. 228. Willd. Sp^ 



PI. 3. 458. Fl. Dan. 323. Schk. t. 179. Engl. Bot. 



327. Stur7n. FLU. 

 Lepidium nudicaule, Gouan, IlL p. 40. Willd. Sp. PI. 3. 



432. 



Thlaspi nudicaule, Desfont. Atl. 2. 67. De Cand. FL 



Fran^. 4. 708. 

 Guepinia Iberis, Desvauoc, Journ. de Bot. 3. 167. 

 Teesdalia nudicaulis, i?. Brown^ in Ait. Kew.^ ed. 2. torn. 4. 



p. 83. 



Geograpiiical Distribution. 



This plant seems chiefly to inhabit the south-west regions 

 of the Old World. Its eastern limits seem to be Grodno and 

 Translyvania, (20° E. Lat.) Northward it extends to the 

 64°, for it does not grow in Lapland. Southward it extends, 

 with some variety of form, (with smaller lobes of its root- 

 leaves), as far as Peloponnesus, the south of Spain, and even 

 Algiers, (35° N. Lat.) 



