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south, of Leeds, Benson County. The .color of the flowers \^. very seldom 





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. : 1063. SOlidago inornata J. LunejJ, 1. C, p. H5. — ^Caulis gracilis, do 



, rhizomate 1 dm longo, feracillimo, horizontali oriundus, 5 dm altus, glaber 



r:,' usque inflorescentiam, dein magis minusve scaber vel pubescens, perinde 

 j ac rami floriferi. Folia firma et rigida, in caule admodum remota,. lan- 



ceolata veLoblanceoIata, ambobus extremitatibus angustata,. integra vel 



remote serrulata, manifeste vel obscure tri-costata, marginibus, et prae- 



I cipue. extremitatibus earum proximis, scabro-ciUata", supeilora sessilia. 



I 1^8 cm longa, inferiora petiolis alatis longipetiplata, cum petiolo 8-r 



9 cm longa. Inflorescentia ramis paucis, divaricatis, vAlde recurvatis 

 secunda, pyramidata, remisse et exigue ilorifera, tarn lata; quara alta. 

 Bracteae involucri oblongae, obtusae.- CapitUla 4— 5, mm alta. — The 



missounensis 



S. concinna A. Nels. All of these have an inflorescence of dense crow-. 

 ded racemes approximated into a broad and short panicle, which has 

 glabrous branches. — North Dakotaic This modest-looking, lovely 

 golden-rod was collected, in the open w.oodland bordering the prairie at 

 Pleasant Lake,'' Benson County, on August 14, 1911, by the writer. It 

 has also been found by Rev. Father Z. L. Chandonnet in dry,, sandy 

 soil . at Richdalo, Ottertail County, Minn., an excellent specimen, of 

 '^hich bears the date of July 15, 1911. At least in North Dakota it 

 appears to be a rare plant. .. ^ , . ' ' . ^ 



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106^. SoUdayo gl%berrma var. 'montana (A. Gray) J.'Lunell. 1. c.^ 

 p. 146. — To replace S. missounensis var. woB^awa' A.Gray, vide Synop- 

 Ucal.' Flora of North America. Vol. I. oart. II. 'p." 155 (1888). ' '. , ' 



' • » 





•■1065. Solidago perornata J. Lunell, 1. c.: p. 146. — Caiilis 7-10 dm 



Alius, gracilis, minutatim, pubescens, parte infima denudata excepta,^ 

 striatus, valde foliosus. Folia tenuia, membranacea, tricostata, breviter' 

 pilosa et superne scabriuscula, subtus dense et adpresse puberulenta (et 

 hoc eo magis in venis), lanceolata vel latiora, acuminata, sessilia vel 

 inflma alato-petiolata, supra caulem medium maxima, dentibus inaequali- 

 ^us acute serrata. Inflorescentia racemos unilaterales, divaricatos. recur- 

 vatos, gracillimos forraans. ' Capitula 4 mm alta. — This species differs 

 from S. dumetorum Lunell, which has thicker and more scabrous leaves 

 3nd an inflorescence with fastigiate, short branches and closely glomerate 

 heads; from S. elongata Nutt., xvhich has nearly glabrous, sub-entire, 

 Obscurely 3-nerved leaves and an elongated panicle; Ivom S. PtMien 

 Nutt., which has a stem glabrous up to the inflorescence, larger heads, 

 and leaves more sharply serrate and glabrous ' except on the margins 

 »nd on the midveins; and* from S. satanica Lunell,. which has its upper 

 Jeaves sessile or short-petioled and densely cinereous-pubescent beneath 

 ^^J\evr contracted, ' mariy-flbwered pyramidal infloresc^npe with 

 smaller crowded flowers, and it -is ■ exclusively a wood-land plant. <- 

 ^orth Dakota: The type was collected by me on. the 18th of August, 



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