AXCHEMIUA. 
93 
2. A. odordta rMill.) ; cal.-tube of fr. beUshaped not fiuTOwed, 
exterior spines declining, 1. interruptedly pinnate haivy and with, 
minute glands beneath. — Scented. Spikes long. Fl. yellow; 
pet. obovate-lanceolate, wedgeshaped below, distant, spreading, 
flat, turning up at the end. Styles spreading. Leaflets deeply 
and shai-ply semate throughout. Cal.-tube of the large fruita 
rarelv with shallow furrows in its upper half. Taller than Sp. 1, 
usually more branched ; 1. and Its., fl. and fr. larger. — Waste places, 
rare. "P. ^'I.V^. E. I. 
6. Aichemil'la Linn. Lady's Mantle. 
1. A. vidgdris (L.) ; I. reniform or nearly orbicular plaited 
7 — 9-lobed, lobes rounded serrate throughout green beneatn, fl. in 
terminal corymbs.—^. B. 597. — Slightly hairy. Fl. yellowish 
green. L, large on long stalks, st.-l. sessile with large notched 
connate stipules. — ^. siihsericea (Koch) ; st.-l. and petioles silky, 
old 1. wa'sy with broad waves. A. montana Willd. — Dry hilly 
pastures. P. YI. — Mil. Common Lady's 3Iantle. E. S. I. 
2. A. alpina (L.) ; radical I. digitate, divisions 5 — 7 separaied 
to their base oblong blunt closely serrate at the end white and 
silky beneath, fl. in inten-upted spikes of small lateral and ter- 
minal corpnbs, st. slightly branched simple below. — E. B. 244. 
St. 51. 2. — St., cal. and imderside of the 1. beautifully silkj'. 
Leaflets rarely slightly combined, otder ones of the radical 1. 
usually nearly opposite to each other. Branches usually iin- 
di\-ided, ascending. — Mountains. P. VI. Yll Alpine Lady^s 
Mantle. E. S. L 
3. A. conjunc'ta (Bab.) ; radical I. peltate-palmate, divisions 
5 — 7 combined through \ of their length oblong blimt closely 
sen-ate at the end white and very silky beneath, fl. in interrupted 
spikes of smaU lateral and terminal coiymbs, st. with many 
branches. — A. argentea (Don) not Lam. — Closely allied to A. 
alpina but usually much larger; distinguished by the leaflets 
which are broader and so placed in the radical leaves that the 2 
e.vtcrnal ones almost if not quite touch each other so as to present 
the appearance of a peltate leaf; st. with long alternate spreading 
branches which are often again subdivided; the fl. in small 
nearly simple distant corjTiibs, upon long stalks, and silky. 
[Ferroe Isles. Sir W. C' Trevelyan.] — Clova Moimtains. 3/r. 
G. Don and 3fr. A. O. Black .' (1853). Glen Sannox, Arran. 
I>r. N. Tyache .' P. VI. VU. S. 
4. A. arveti'sis (h.) ; I. palmate S- fid ivedgeshapcd belojc hairy, 
lobes with 3 — 6 teeth at the end, fl. sessile axillary. — Aphanes 
(L.) E. B. 1011. — St. prostrate or ascending, 4 — 5 in. long. Fl. 
very small, gi-eenish, m small hairy inconspicuous tufts. — Dry 
fields on sand and gravel. A. V. — YIU.. Parsley Piert. E. S. 1. 
