JJGOPODHTM. PIMPINKLLA. 
145 
11. ^gopo'dium Linn. Gout-weed. 
1. Por%>-«Vi:a(L.).—^.J5. 940.— St. 1—2 feet high, erect, 
furrowed. L. 2 or 3 times teruate ; leaflets ovate-acuminate, 
luiequal at the base, acutely sen-ate. Creeping. — Damp -places. 
r. VI. VII. E. s. I. 
12. Ca'rusi Linn. 
[C. Car'ui (h.) ; partial involucre 0, general 0 or of 1 leaf, 
1. oipinnate, leaflets cut into linear segments. — E. B. 1503. — St. 
1 — 2 feet high, branched. Root fusiform. Carp, aromatic. — 
Meadows and pastures. B. Yl. Caraway. 1 E. S. I. 
1. C. verticilldtmn (Koch) ; general and partial involucres of 
many leaves small, 1. pinnate, leaflets divided to the base into 
capillary spreading segments. — Slum Sm., E. B. 395. — St. 1 — 1\ 
foot high. lioot fasciculate. Segments of the hnjlets spreading 
so as to appear whorled and quite siuTounding the petiole. L. 
mostlv long-stalked, radical. — Damp and huly pastures, rare. 
P. Vlil. E. S. I. 
13. BuNiTJir Linn. Pig-nut. 
1. B. Jle.rnosum (With.) ; general involucre of 1—3 leaves, 
partial more numerous, /)•. oca/ naiTowing upwards crowned with 
the long stylopode and erect styles, interstices vitk 3 stripes. — 
E. B. 988. B. denudatum DC. — Involucres sometimes altogether 
wanting. Root a solitai-y tuber. St. a foot or more high, very 
slender below, bearing a few 1. with linear segments. Radical 1. 
tritemate with long footstalks tapeiing dovrawards. — Sandy and 
gi-avelly pastiu-es. P. V. VI. E. S. I. 
2. B. Bidhocas'tanum (L.); general and partial involucres of 
many leares, fr. oblong crowned ^-ith the short stylopode and 
rejlexed styles, interstices with single stripes. — E. B. S. 2862. 
Carum Koch, DC. — Involucres always present. Root. a solitary 
tuber. St. about 2 ft. high. Lower 1. bipinnate, vAih a trian- 
gular outline, rather many near the base of the stem, rareh' 1 or 
2 radical upon long footstalks tapering downwards. — Chalky 
fields in Camb. and Herts. P. VI. VII. E. 
14. Pimpinel'la Linn. Bumet-Saxifrage. 
1. P. 7nag'na (L.); 1. pinnate, leaflets all ovate serrate some- 
what cut the terminal one 3-lobed, st. angularly striate. — E. B. 
408. — St. 1 — 2 feet high, leafy. Lateral leaflets sometimes 
3-lobed. Styles longer than the ovary, as long or longer than 
the oval fruit.— Shady hills. P. VH. VIII. E. S. I. 
2. P. Saxif'raga (L.) ; 1. pinnate, leaflets of the lower 1. 
roundish-ovate serrate somewhat cut, those of the steju-l. bipin- 
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