ANTKNNARIA. DORONICUM. 
i;7 
nt the root, riowerin" st. witli few leaves and often only a 
sinjfle head. L. downy on both sides. — Shnttleworth sejiarates 
from this as the true G. supinum a ])hint whieh is not cicspitose 
and has a sort of capitate sjhke. I doubt its distinctness but 
have seen no specimens. [Mug- Zool. Bot. ii. 192.) — Highland 
mountains. P. VII. S. 
22. (If).) Antennaria R. Br. 
1. J. tfioica (Gaert.) ; shoots procumbent, dowering st. sim])le 
erect, corymb dense terminal, involucral scales oblong dilated 
upwards obtuse coloured, radical 1. obovate-spathulate glabrous 
above cottony beneath, stem 1. nearly equal linear-lanceolate ad- 
pressed. — E. B. 2()7. Gnaphaliiim Sm. — Root of long simple 
fibres. St. prostrate, woody, terminating in a tuft of numerous 
1. and producing j>rostrate leafy scions. Flowering st. 4 — 8 in. 
high, quite sinqde, cottony. Heads 4 — 5, erect, slightly stalked, 
luv. -scales white or rose-colour. — hyperborea ; 1. cottony on 
both sides. E. B. S. 2()40.— Mountain heaths. P. VI. VII. 
t2. A. margaritacea (R. Br.); st. erect branched above coiym- 
bose leafy, 1. Unear-lanceolate acute cottony below, heads in 
level-topped corymbs. — E. B. 2018. — St. 2 — 3 feet high, cottony. 
L. alternate, slightly cottony above, densely beneath. Inv. white. 
FI. yellowish. — Moist meadows, rare. P. VIII. 
Section 4. SENECIONEyE. Heads homogamous or hete- 
rogamous, discoid or radiant. Anth. without appendages. Pap- 
pus pilose or setaceous, rarely 0. 
23. (C.) Doronicum Linn. 
tl. D. Pardalianches (L.) ; 1. cordate denticulate, lowermost 
1. on long stalks, intermediate with clasping auricles at the base 
of the stalk, iqipermost sessile clasping, root creeping tuberous. 
— E. B. S. 2654. — St. 2 — 3 feet high, erect, solitary, hollow, 
hairy. L. hairy, minutely toothed, soft, blunt, the uppermost 
acute. Petioles except the lowest winged or auricled. Heads 
several, involucral scales lanceolate-subulate. Florets yellow. 
The earlier heads overtopped by the latter ones. Fr. oblong, fur- 
rowed. — Damp and hilly woods and pastures, rare. P. V. — VII. 
t2. D. plant agineum (L.?); 1. ovate denticulate, radical on 
long stalks rounded or subcordate produced at the base, stem 1. 
sessile clasping the lowermost with a winged and auricled stalk. 
root — E. B. 630. (excl. leaf.) — Crowm of the root woolly. 
St. 2 — 3 feet high. Stem 1. narrowed in their low'er half but 
sessile, uppermost with a long taper point. Heads usually soli- 
tary, or, if more, the lateral ones not overtopping the terminal 
one. Involucral scales subulate. F'lorets yellow'. — Damp places, 
rare. P. VI. VII. E. S. 
