ALClllCMILLA. SinBALDfA. 
!)3 
roundcil scrvatcd througlumt green beneatli, fl. in terminal eo- 
ryinhs. — E. li. 597- W. 2. 5. — Slightly hairy. Fl. yellowish 
green. L. large on long stalks, those on the stem sessile with 
a |)air of large notehed eonnate sti))ules. — /3. subsericen (Koeh); 
st. 1. and i>etioles silky.— Dry hilly jiastiu'es. P. VI. — VIII. 
Common Lady’s Mantle. 
2. A. alpina (L.) ; radical 1. diyitate : dwisions 5 — 7 separated 
to their base oblong obtuse elosely serrated at the end white and 
silky beneath, tl. in interrn])ted s[)ikes of small lateral and ter- 
minal corymbs, st. slightly braiiehed simj)le below. — E. B. 244. 
St. 51. 2. — St., eal. and under side of the 1. beautifully silky. 
Leaflets rarely slightly combined, outer ones of the radical 1. 
usually nearly opposite to each other. Branches usually un- 
divided, ascending. — Mountains. P. VI. VII. Alpine Lady’s 
Mantle. 
I 3. A. conjuncta (Bab.); radical 1. peltate-palmate : divisions 
' 5 — 7 combined through J of their length oblong obtuse closely 
: serrated at the end white and very silky beneath, fl. in interrupted 
! spikes of small lateral and terminal eoiA mbs, st. with numerous 
j branches. — Bab. in A. N. H.x. 25. A. argentea {1)00) not Lam. — 
j Closely allied to A. alpina but usually much larger in all its parts 
i and distinguished by its connected leaflets which are broader and 
1 darker coloured, more silky on the under side and so j>laced in 
the radical leaves that the 2 external ones almost if not quite touch 
each other so as to present the appearance of a peltate leaf-, st. 
i with long alternate spreading branches, which are often again 
subdivided ; the fl. in small nearly simjile chstant corymbs, upon 
longer stalks, and more silky. This plant has now retained its 
’ characters for many years in gardens, under various culture 
; and from seed. [It was found in the Ferroe Isles by Sir W. C. 
] Trevelyan.] — Clova Mountains. Mr. G. Don ! Glen Sannox, 
I Arrau, Scotland. Dr. N. Tyache. P. VI. VII. S. 
! 4. A. arvensis (L.) ; 1. palmate 3-fid wedgeshaped below hairy : 
lobes with 3 — (i teeth at the end, fl. sessile axillary. — Aj)hanes 
(L.) E. B. 1011. — St. prostrate, 4 — 5 in. long. Fl. very small, 
greenish, in small hairy inconspicuous tufts. — Dry fields on sand 
and gravel. A. V.— VIII. Parsley Piert. 
9. SiBBALDiA Linn. 
1. S. procumbens (L.); 1. ternate, leaflets wedgeshaped with 
‘ 3 teeth at the end, fl. corymbose, pet. lanceolate. — E. B. 897- 
St. 17 . 5. — L. pilose on both sides. St. woody, procumbent. 
Pet. very small. “ Pistils and stam. very variable in number. I 
am disposed to consider it as a Potentilla.” W. Wilson. — Dry 
summits of Scottish mountains. P. VII. S. 
