334 
INULA glandulosa. 
Glandular-leaved Inula. 
— 
SYNGENESIA POLYGAMIA SUPERFLUA. 
Nat. ord. ConymbBirerm. Jussieu gen. 177. Div. II. Receptaculum 
nudum, Semen papposum. Flores radiati. In TusstLaGine et SENECIONE 
flores partim flosculosi. 
INULA. Flores radiati ligulis numerosis. Cal. imbricatus squamis 
patulis, exterioribus majoribus. Anth. basi bisete. Pappus pilosus. 
Flores lutei axillares aut terminales, sepé corymbost. Juss. loc. cit. 181. 
I. glandulosa, foliis sessilibus oblongis obsoleté serratis serraturis glandu-~ 
losis, caule hirsuto unifloro, calycinis squamis lanceolatis villosis. Willd. 
sp. pl. 8. 2097. 
Inula glandulosa. Marsch. Bieb. taur. cauc. 2. 319. Adam apud Weber et 
Mohr cat. 1. 68. . 40. Willd. enum. 896. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. 5. 78. 
Curtis’s magaz. 1907. xii 
Inula orientalis. Lamarck encyc. 3. 255. 
Herbacea, perennis. Caulis ascendens, hirsutus, subteres, striatus. Fol. 
distantia, decrescentia, sparsa, erectiuscula, semiamplexicaulia, margine glan- 
dulis nigricantibus obsolets dentata; inferiora lanceolato-oblonga, superiora 
ovato-lanceolata, subtits varicoso-venosa, longiora 3-uncialia vel ultra, latitudine 
circitér unciali. Cal. multiplex, mollis, fusco-hirsutissimus, squarrosé 'v. sine 
ordine patens, duplo v. ultra brevior radio, foliolis exterioribus lineari-lanceo- 
latis angustis, interioribus angustissimis, Flosculi radii numerosi, lineares, 
angusti, flavicantes, ultra unciam longi, apice tridentatt, dorso pilosi. Flosculi 
disci limbo turbinato-patente, laciniis acutis erectiusculis, Anth. flava. 
. 
According to Count Mussin Puskin, a native of that part 
of Georgia which is near the Caspian Sea. Mr. Marschall 
of Bieberstein found it on Mount Caucasus, growing along 
with the grandiflora of the same genus, from which, he ob- 
serves, it differs only by having the glands of the leaves 
produced on a completely entire border, instead of at the 
points of the teeth of a serrated border; and adds, that it 
seems to be a mere variety of it, though, as well as Will- 
denow, he records the two as specifically distinct in his work. 
We do not see why this useful botanist has quoted La- 
marck’s Inuxa orientalis, professedly adopted by that author 
from Tournefort, as a synonym to his glandulosa, while he 
adds the plant from Tournefort’s own work as a synonym 
to his grandiflora. ‘This seems an oversight. | 
Introduced in 1804 by a Donn, the then Curator of 
