Anemone .] i. ranunculacea:. 5 
1. T. alpinum L. (alpine M.'); stem simple nearly leafless, 
raceme simple terminal, flowers drooping. E. B. t. 262. 
Mountains in the north of England, Wales, and Scotland, frequent. 
2 f.. 6, 7. — Root-leaves upon long stalks, biternate ; leaflets roundish, 
crenate or lobed, dark-green. Stum. 10 — 12. Ovaries 2 — 4. Flowers 
few. Pedicels in fruit recurved : they are straight in the two fol- 
lowing. 
2. T. minus L. (lesser 31.) ; glabrous or slightly pubescent, 
leaves 3 — 4-pinnate, leaflets roundish or wedge-shaped trilid 
and toothed glaucous beneath, panicle diffuse, its branches al- 
ternate or whorled, flowers mostly drooping. — a. stem leafless 
at the base, petioles with indexed auricles at the base, panicle 
leafless, achenes fusiform. E. B. t. 11. — /3. stem leafy to the 
base, petioles with reflexed auricles, panicle leafy, achenes 
narrow oblong. T. majus Sm.; E.B. t. 611. T. flexuosum 
Bernh. — y. stem leafy to the base, petioles with horizontal 
auricles, panicle leafless, achenes oval. T. saxatile D. C. T. 
Koehii Fries. 
Stony pastures, especially in limestone or chalky countries. Sand- 
hills on the coast, near S. Shields and Yarmouth ; Scotland. — /3. 
Principally in the north of England and in Scotland y. Cheddar, 
Somersetshire. 2/.. 6, 7. — Stem usually zigzag, from one to two feet 
high, mostly glaucous, solid, or hollow particularly when luxuriant 
Although we do not recognise the above as distinct species, we avail 
ourselves of the characters proposed by Mr. Babington to mark our 
varieties. T. pubescens, fcetidum, calcareum, &c., appear to be the 
pubescent or glandular states-of it, and T. nutans Desf. a form with 
much-accuminated leaflets. 
3. T./lcivumlj. (common M.)-, stem erect branched furrowed, 
leaves bipinnate, leaflets roundish or broadly obovate or wedge-* 
shaped trifid, or panicle compact subcorymbose, flowers erect. 
E. B. t. 367. 
Banks of rivers and ditches and in moist meadows. Less frequent 
in Scotland, and principally found along the shores of the Clyde. — 
2/.. 6, 7. — Stem 2 — 3 ft. high. Flowers very numerous, yellow. 
Lobes of the leaves varying in breadth. 
3. Anemone Linn. Anemone. 
Involucre of 3 divided leaves, more or less remote from the 
flower. Cal. petaloid, of 5 — 9 sepals, imbricated in aestivation. 
Cor. 0. Stamens and Styles numerous. Achenes pointed or 
awned. — Named from avsywrii, and that from avepog, the wind ; 
because the flowers are easily moved by the wind. 
1. A. Pulsatilla L. (Pasque-flower A.) ; leaves as well as the 
involucre with doubly pinnatifid linear segments, flower inclined, 
sepals 6, achenes with long feathery awns. E.B. t. 51. 
b 3 
