Pages
(seq. 1)
Plants & Trees examined April 26th
Book I & V —
Scunk-weed, or Skunk-Cabbage Arum Americanum, Beta folio. Catesby. Vol. 2. Class Tetrandria, Monongymia — compound flower.
Calyx. Monophyllous perianthium, forming a kind of spatha by ye roling together of ye mergin of ye leaf, con= =taining a capaciuos cavety at ye base, gibbose, tapering toward ye apex & terminating in a reflex point. The calyx rises from ye root [taper?] a flatish peduncle 1/2 an inch thick, before ye leaves of ye plant appear. — very thick succulent, smooth & glossy beautifullly clouded with red & green, somewhat like marble paper.
From ye base of ye flower cup rises a round pedicle half an inch long, on which stands ye florets an ovate form, closely con[nect?] [?]ther, about ye size of a [a?] [app?]earing much like [?]
(seq. 2)
Plants & Trees examined April 26th Book I & V —
Scunk-weed, or Skunk-Cabbage Arum Americanum, Beta folio Catesby. vol. 2.
Class. Tetrandria Monogymie — compound flower.
Calyx. Monophyllous perianthium, forming a kind of spatha by ye roling together of ye mergin of ye leaf, con= =taining a capacious cavety at ye base, gibbose, tapering towards ye apex & terminating in a reflex point. The calyx rises from ye root [tap?] a flatish peduncle 1/2 an inch thick, before ye leaves of ye plant appear, — very thick succulent, smooth & glossy beautifully clouded with red & green, somewhat like marble paper.
From ye base of ye flower cup rises a round pedicle half an inch long, on which stands ye florets an ovate form, closely con[nected?] [?]ther, about ye size of a [?] [app?]earing much like [?]
(seq. 3)
2) [?] florets are disposed in diago= =nal rows.
[Cor]ol. The corolla, which are four to each floret, rise perpendicular from ye pericarpum, succulent, sessile, ye apex truncate. The florets are very closely pressed together, & give ye sur= =face of ye compound flower much ye appearance of ye surface of ye Pine Apple.
Stem: The Stamina are four succulent, filaments flat filiments, inserted into ye common receptacle & somewhat longer than ye corolla. The Anthera erect, adhering laterally to ye apex of ye filiments.
Pist. One style, longer than ye stamina. The apex of a roundish redish colour. Stigma flatish & divided at ye summit.
Germ. A common receptacle, containing ye seeds surrounding a porous or [spring?] substance.
The flower-cup appears early in ye spring, & as it approaches a state of perfection, which is within a few weeks, the leaves begin to appear. [The?] root is fibrous, white [?] [?] kind. The leaves [?] [?] [?olled] hard in approximity to [?]
(seq. 4)
3) their apex appearing first, & as they rise they open & expand, usually coming coming up at a small distance from ye flowers. They are very large, stand on short peduncles, of a light green, below large ribs of ovate form tho^. broadest at ye base. Some of them are inches high & inches broad. When ye leaves are come up ye flower withers & soon disappears, but ye leaves continue untill ye latter part of [sum=] =mer. It has no stalk.
Seeds.
This curious plant grows very plentifully in moist ground, in meadows & swamps. ___________________
783. Book I.
March 1st: Observed the female male of ye white Poplar in blossom — examinded ye spikes —
The dogwood or white Willow, blossom in ye swamps —
[March?] 30th Black or upland Alder in [?] examined ye spikes —
(seq. 5)
4) April 1st No. 1 Examined ye flossom of ye Dioecia White Poplar. The spike is long & hairy, Decandrea thrown out from a kind of catkin — ye flowers are set very close with their disk towards ye apex & horizontal to ye stem. The germin, a leaf thrown off from ye stem -- terminates with long white hairs The anthera a sect close together on ye base of ye germin. Could perceive no Pistel nor any filiments. The Anthera seem to be each divided in to 4 segments or are striated. The number 8 or 10 — could not deter= =mine exactly — of a deep murrey colour.
No. 2 Exam. the spike of ye Alder, Monoecia our small upland Alder — could not Triandria discover ye distinct parts of ye fruitificao. — a vast quantity of farina — have not doubt of its being of ye Class Mon. Triand. The flowers seem to stand in a spiral form, turned from S. to W.
No. 3 Exam. the spike of a white Willow, or dog-wood — grows in swamps. The spike appears a thic covered with a white thick down — they are hairs which terminate & small petal or germen thrown off from ye round stem or rib of ye [?] in disk of this petal is 2 or 3, & per[?] double anthera. could not determ.