Viewing page 341 of 464

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

Country:

State:

Province:

Territory:


Transcription Notes:
The label is leading to Polypodium vulgare in the Codex, but I did not see there anything about this specimen. http://bibdigital.rjb.csic.es/ing/Libro.php?Libro=3595&pagina=1062 7865. P. vulgar e Sp. I.: P. frond, pinnatifidis: pinnis oblongis subserratis obtusis, rad. squamata. Sp. I- S. XII. n. 13. FI. S. II. n. 944. P. fr. pinnata : pinnis lane, indivisis serrulatis alternis connato-sessilibus. H. cliff, p. 475. n. 4. FI. suec. I. n. 845. Roy. lugdb. 499. Dalib. paris. 311. Mat. med. n. 485. P. pinnatum: pinnis lane, integris. Fl. lapp. n. 381. P. vulgare Bauh. pin. 359. Plum. fil. 27. t. A. f. 2. P. majus Dod. pempt. 464. _ Var. p\ Sp. I.: P. minus Bauh. pin. 359. Dod. pempt. 464. ? Habitat in Europae rimis rupium. ^ "In Europae rimis rupium" = cracks in rocks in europe the latin on the page is "In rupibus et saxis umbrosis Novae Angliae legit Oakes" which is something about rocks and shady places in New England, but I have no idea if it's supposed to be a place or the collector's motto or who knows. Geonames has an Oakes in New York,Ulster County, Town of Lloyd, and it probably has rocks, but hard to say.