riNXJS. 
ulate niucronatc keeled loriffer than the ripe fruit. — E. B. 1100. 
— rmticosc, erect. L. with a hrond flat shallow channel above, 
the keel beneath with a slender furrow'. Berries black, tinned 
with blue, about half the length of the leaves. — Dry hills, esj)e- 
cially on a calcareous soil. Sh. V. Juniper. 
2. J. nana (Willd.); 1. 3 in each whorl incurved linear-lan- 
ceolate mucronate keeled equalling the ripe fruit. — E. B. S. 274,'f. 
— A prostrate shrub with longer berries and shorter leaves than 
the last. — Mountains. Sh. V. 
Tribe III. Ahietineee. 
.I. PiNUS Linn. 
1. P. syleestris (L.); 1. in pairs, young cones stalked recurved 
ovate-conical, wing thrice as long as the seed. — E. B. 2400. — A 
lofty tree. Cones referred by the late Prof. Don to P. Mughus (a 
variety of this species) have been found at considerable depths 
in the Irish bogs. — Highlands. T. V. VI. Scotch Fir. S. 
