66 
19. GEKANIACE^. 20. LDTACEiE. 
fruit." South coast of England. — Walls and hedgebanks. A. 
v.— VIII. E. S. I. 
12. G. rohertidnum (L.) ; pet. obovate entire or slightly emar- 
flnate, claws glabrous very long nearly equalling the long-awned 
airy and slightly glandular sepals, carp, transversely wrinkled 
downy, seeds smooth, 1. ternate or quiuate, leaflets stalked tritid 
incise-pinnatifid, st. spreading erect. — E. B. 1486. B. v. 187. — 
Fl. purple, sometimes white. Cal. with a very few glandular 
hairs, uot ti-ansversely viTiukled. — /3. muritimum ; carp, glabrous 
with 1 — -2 deep transverse wrinkles at the top. — y. G. purpttreiim 
(Forst.) ; pet. narrower, sep. glandular-hairy, carp, glabrous and 
more wrinkled, 1. in narrower segments. B.B. S. 2648. —Hedge- 
banks. i3. and y. Soxithem sea-coast. A. V. — IX. E. S. I. 
2. Ero'dixtm VHerit. Storksbill. 
1. E. cicutdrium (Sni.) ; st. procumbent hairy, peduncles 
many-flowered, perfect stam. dilated not toothed below glabrous, 
beak hairy, a concentric furrow below the circular glandless de- 
pression on the carpel, 1. pinnate, leaflets sessile pinnatifid cut, 
stip. lanceolate. — E. B. 1768. — Very hairy. Fl. purplish or 
white ; two pet. often bearing a spot. Leaflets very deeply di- 
\-ided, their segments lanceolate or linear, acute. In Jersey 
specimens the 1. are ovate and short, and their segments short 
broad and blimtish. Waste ground. A. \1. — IX. E. S. I. 
2. E. moschdtum (Sm.) ; st. procumbent hairy, , peduncles 
many-flowered, perfect stam. toothed at the base glabrous, beak 
downy, a concentric furrow below the circular glandular depres- 
sion on the carpel, 1. pinnate, leaflets nearly sessile ovate unequally 
cut, stip. oval. — E. B. 902. — Much larger than the preceding, 
and diflusing a strong musky scent when handled. Leaflets less 
deeply cut. — Waste places, rather rare. A. VI. VII. E. I. 
•3. E. marit'imum (Sm.); st. prostrate slightly hairy, pe- 
duncles 1- — 2-flowered, pet. very minute, a transverse furrow 
below the semicircular depression on the cai-pel, 1. simple ovate- 
cordate stalked lobed and crenate. — E. B. 646. — St. often very 
fleshy. Fl. very small. I'et. pale red, very minute, often want- 
ing. — Sandy and gravelly places, particularly near the sea, rare. 
P. v.— IX. E. I. 
Order XX. LINAGES. 
Sep. 4 — 5, persistent, imbricate. Pet.4— 6, twisted in the bud, 
clawed, deciduous. Stam. as many as the pet., connected into 
a hypogynous ring with intermediate teeth (abortive stamens). 
Ovary with about as many cells and styles as the sepals, stigmas 
capitate. Caps, generally tipped with the hardened base of the 
