TROLLIUS. AUUILKGIA. 
!) 
greatly ])r<)(1uccd. — Marshy places, common. ^3. in more moun- 
tiiinous situations. P. III. IV. Marsh Mariyold. 
2. C. radicans (Forst.); st. creepiiir/, 1. triangular sonicuhat 
heart-shaped serrate-erenate. — E.B. 2175. Forst. in Linn. Trans. 
viii. t. 17. — FI. half the size of those of C. palustris, sep. nar- 
rower, the hinder angles of the leaves scarcely at all produced 
so that the leaf is almost triangular. I have only seen cultivated 
specimens. — “ In a ditch that runs from the farm-house called 
llaltoun, on the estate of C. Gray, Esq. of Carse, Forfarshire. 
1790 .” Mr. G. Don; all the other stations jn-obably belong to 
C. palustris /3. minor. P. V. VI. S. 
8. Trollius Linn. 
1. T. europaus [L.); sep. 10 — 15 concave converging into a 
globe, pet. 10 about as long as the stam., 1. palmately 5-parted : 
segments rhomboid 5-partite inciso-serrate. — E.B. 28. fi.4713. 
— Fl. bright yellow. Pet. ligulate. St. 1 — 2^ feet high. — Damp 
mountain pastures. P. VI. VII. Globe Flower. 
9. Eranthis Salisb. 
[*1. E. hyemalis (Salisb.); sep. G — 8 oblong. — 2?. 4714. Hel- 
lehorus Linn. — Ra(bcal 1. upon long stalks, 5 — 7-parted, deeply 
cut into linear-oblong segments. St. 4 — 6 in. high, with 2 op- 
posite sessile 1. just below the solitary yellow fl. Root (rhizoma) 
tuberous. — Naturalized in thickets in the south of England. P. 
II. III. Winter Aconite.^ E. S. ? 
10. Helleborus Linn. 
1. H. viridis (L.) ; radical 1. digitate stalked, stem 1. sessile at 
the ramifications, st. few-flowered, calyx spreading. — E. B. 200. 
R. 47 I 8 . — Veins of the 1. prominent beneath. Stigma erect. 
St. 1 foot high, annual. Fl. greenish-yellow. — Thickets on a 
calcareous soil. P. III. IV. Green Hellebore. E. I. 
t2. H.foetidus (L.); 1. pedate stalked, upper 1. gradually be- 
coming ovate bracts, st. leafy many-flowered, calyx converging. — 
E,B.bV6. R. 4715 . — Upper 1. gradually contracting and then- 
petioles widening until they become bracts. St. 2 feet high. Fl. 
globose, drooping, greenish tipped with purple. — Thickets, but 
usually near houses. P. 111. IV. Stinking Hellebore. E. S. 
11. Aciuilegia Linn. 
1. A. vulgaris (L.); spur of the pet. incurved, limb obtuse 
rather shorter than the stamens, 1. biternate, leaflets 3-lobed 
creuate. — E.B. 297. R. 4729. — St. 2 — 3 feet high, slightly leafy. 
Caps, hairy. Inner stam. frequently imperfect. — Woods and 
thickets. P. V. VI. Columbine. 
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