BRITISH JUNGERMANNIA5. 
( J. ciliaris.) 
JUNGERMANNIA CILIARIS. 
(TAB. LXV. ) 
J unger mann i a , caule procumbente, pinnatim ramoso: foliis bifariam imbricatis, valde convexis, 
inaequalithr bilobis ; lobis lobulisque bipartite, longfe tenuiterque ciliatis : stipulis subquadratis, 
inaequaliter lobatis, longissimh ciliatis : fructu laterali ; calycibus obovatis ; ore contracto, dentato. 
Jungermannia ciliaris. Linn. Sp. PI. p. 1C01. Syst. Nat. n. p. 70 6. FI. Suec. p. 402. 
FI. Lapp. p. 342. Pollich, Pal. hi. p. 197. Leers, Herb. p. 251. Ehrh. Beitr. 
ii. p. 149. Oeder, Enum. PL FI. Dan. p. 42. Willd. Berol. p. 342. Hoffm. Germ. 
ii. p. 84. Roth, Germ. in. p. 400. Dicks. PL Crypt. Fasc. ii. p. 14. Weber and 
Mohr, Crypt, p. 413. (fide Wahl.) Wahl. Lapp. p. 385. Engl. Bot. t. 2241. 
Jungermannia puleherrima. Weber, Spic. FI. Goet. p. 151. Swartz, in Amcen. Acad. 
x. p. 116. Swartz, in Act. Nov. Ups. iv. p. 244. Hoffm. Germ. ir. p. 83. Lamarck, 
Encycl. Method, hi. p. 285. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. Gmel. n. p. 1352. With. iii. p. 861. 
Dicks. PL Crypt. Fasc. i. p. 7. 
Jungermannia Leersii. Roth, Germ. in. p. 402. 
Lichenastrum scorpioides, pulchrum , villosum. Dill. Muse. t. 69. f. 3. 
Hab. Among rocks and in heathy places, especially in subalpine countries, abundant. 
Plant growing in densely-matted, purplish-brown patches, of considerable size. 
Stems, varying. from one to two or three inches in length, procumbent, or rarely (and only, 
I believe, when growing among tall mosses) suberect, flexuose, filiform, about as thick as 
horse-hair, furnished, at rather distant intervals, with short, obtuse, patent, alternate 
pinna;, which are frequently simple, but at other times beset with one or two small 
pinnulae. The color is a yellow-brown, varying to green in the younger shoots ; the 
substance fragile when dry. 
Leaves (f. 4) more or less densely-crowded, imbricating each other in a bifarious manner over 
the upper surface of the stem ; about half a line long, and not sensibly, smaller towards the 
apices of the stem and pinna; than in the other parts of the plant. They are of a roundish. 
