COULTER AND ROSE-—NORTH AMERICAN UMBELLIFERAE. 63 
2. Washingtonia longistylis (Torr.) Britton, Ill. Fl. 2: 5380. 1897. 
Myrrhis longistylis Torr, FL UL 8S. 810. E824. 
Osmorhiza longistylis DC. Prodr, 4: 282. 1880. 
Stout, from sweet aromatic roots, glabrous or glabrate (sometimes 
quite pubescent when young); leaves, umbels, and fruit as in We eday- 
toni, stylopodium slender conical, | min. lone, bearing a style 2 mim. 
or more long; seed face deeply and broadly concave. 
Type locality, ‘tin wet meadows near Albany, New York, ete.;” the 
only original specimen now in Herb. Torrey is labeled ‘** Montreal;” 
type in Herb, Columbia Univ. 
In woods, Nova Scotia to the mountains of North Carolina and Ala- 
bama, and westward to the Black Hills, eastern Montana, and foothills 
of Colorado. 
Specunens eraniuned: 
Ontario: Kingston, Fowler, July 8, 1895. 
Massacuusetrts: Near Boston, Biltinore Lerb. 6740. 
Connecticut: Near Greens Farms, Pollard 87, June 7, L894. 
Pennsyivanta: Union County, .Vo//; near Lancaster, Sia//, April-June, 1889. 
District or CoLtumpra: Near Washington, Vasey, in 1875; banks of Canal, Pol- 
lurd 177, May 8, 1895; shores of Potomac, Braendle 10, May 12, 1898. 
NortH Carouina: Near Biltmore, Biltinore Herb, 674, in 1897. 
GrorGIA: Northern Georgia, Vasey, in 1878. 
ALABAMA: Near Tuscaloosa, Word, April 11, 1892. 
Wesr Virorsia: Upshur County, Pollock, May 22, 1897. 
TENNESSEE: Knoxville, Ruth 429, May, 189s. 
Onto: Lancaster, Bigelow; Niles, Ingraham, May, 1891; Lorain County, Ricksecker, 
Mav 19, 1894. 
Iuiinots: Near Naperville, Uibach, June 2, 1898. 
Iowa: Fayette County, [ik 77, May 15, 1894. 
Minnesora: Center City, Taylor, June, 1892. 
Sovurm Dakora: Black Hills, Rydbery 725, in 1892; Union County, Wallace, Sep- 
tember, L892. 
Montana: Lower Falls of Missouri, We//rais 275, June 15, 1886. 
CoLorapo: Foothills, Laramie County, Osterhout, August 7, 1896. 
3. Washingtonia brachypoda (Torr.) Heller, Cat. N. Am, Pld. L808, 
ia. 7. 
Osmorhiza beachypoda Torr, Jour. Philad. Acad. ID. 3: 89, 1898, 
Stout, from sweet aromatic roots, pubescent or sometimes glabrous; 
leaves ternately compound (often appearing pinnate after the first 
division); leaflets 2 to 8 em. long, acute, laciniately lobed or toothed; 
umbel 1 to 6-raved, with involucre and involucels of linear bracts, the 
latter equaling or exceeding the flowers; rays 3.5 to 10 cm. long; 
pedicels 1 to 2mm, long; fruit 12 to 16mm, long, 4mm. wide, short 
attenuate at base, rough-bristly on the very prominent ribs; stylopo- 
dium and style 1 mm. long, the former broad and somewhat depressed; 
seed face very deeply concave, nearly inclosing a central cavity. 
Type locality, ‘‘near the banks of Deer Creek,” in the vicinity of 
