158 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 
Specimens examined : 
ALBERTA: Sheep Mountain, Waterton Lake, Macoun 10676, July, 1895. 
Wasninaton: Mount Adams, altitude 1,800 to 2,100 meters, Suksdorf 761, August- 
September, 1885; G. R. Vasey, in 1889; Olympic Mountains, Piper 1052, Sep- 
tember 27, 1890; Yakima County, Menderson 2523, July 31, 1892; Blue 
Mountains, Columbia County, altitude 1,200 meters, Piper 2336, July 15, 1896. 
OrEGoN: White Mountains, altitude 1,200 to 1,800 meters, Cusick 1056, in 1884; 
Hood River, Howell, July 27, 1886; Sheldon 8638, in 1897. 
Ipano: Nez Perces County, Sandberg 393, June 14, 1892; Lake Coeur d’ Alene, 
Sandberg 565, July 6, 1892; Lake Pend Oreille, Leiberg 151, June-Septem- 
ber, 1892; Moscow Mountains, /fenderson 2666; Nez Perces County, altitude 
1,050 meters, Brown 10, August, 1893; Pettit Lake, altitude 2,160 meters, 
Evermann 385, August 18, 1895; Mill Creek and near Salmon, altitude 2,250 
to 2,400 meters, Henderson 4066, 4067, August, 1895; Coeur d’ Alene Moun- 
tains, altitude 850 meters, Leiberg 333, July 21, 1895; near Reeder Creek, 
altitude 900 meters, Leiberg 2742, July 28, 1897; near Lake Coeur d’ Alene, 
Henderson 4606, August 7, 1898; Weiser River and Payette Lake, Jones, June 
15-26, 1899. 
Montana: Near Red Lodge, Rose 31, 478, July-September, 1893; Columbia Falls, 
Williams 379, August 20, 1894; Spanish Basin, Madison Range, altitude 1,800 
meters, Flodman 691, July 22, 1896; Indian Creek and Forks of the Madison, 
Rydberg 4603, 4604, July 21-26, 1897. 
Wyomina: Yellowstone Park, Tweedy; same station, Rydberg 4608, August 7, 
1898; Moose Falls, Yellowstone Park, u1. & EH. Nelson 6579, August 21, 1899. 
8. Angelica tomentosa Watson, Proc. Am. Acad. 11: 141. 1876. 
Stout with coarse hoary pubescence; leaves ternate or quinate then 
once or twice pinnate; leaflets thickish, ovate, acute, oblique at base, 
5 to 10-em. long, unequally and sharply serrate or toothed; umbel 
somewhat equally many-rayed, with neither involucre nor involucels 
(rarely a bractlet or two); rays 2.5 to 10 cm. long; pedicels 8 to 12 
mm. long; ovary densely pubescent; fruit oblong-elliptical, more or 
less pubescent, 6 to 8 mm. long, 4 to 5 mm. broad; dorsal and inter- 
mediate ribs small and acutish; lateral wings thin, about as broad as 
body; stylopodium low conical, with long reflexed styles; oil tubes 
solitary in all the intervals. 
Type locality, ‘‘in the coast ranges from San Francisco to Mendocino 
County, Cal.;” type in Herb. Gray. 
In the mountains from Mendocino County to San Diego County, Cal. 
Specimens examined: 
CauirorNniA: Near San Francisco, Wilkes Exped. 1377; Kellogg & Harford 317, 1161, 
in 1868-69; Sausalito, Marin County, and Mendocino County, G. R. Vasey, 
in 1875; Howell Mountain, Napa River Basin, Jepsou, February 23, 1896; 
San Jacinto Mountains, San Diego County, //adl 740, July 29, 1897. 
A specimen collected by Lemmon in June, 1887, in the ‘Sierra Valley,’’ has been 
referred to this species, but it is so distant from the normal range that we doubt it. 
The lack of foliage and good fruit prevents any more definite disposition of it. 
9. Angelica kingii (Watson) C. & R. 
Selinum kingii Watson, Bot. King Sury. 126. 1871. 
Smooth (except the slightly pubescent. inflorescence), 3 to 6 dm. 
high; lower leaves bipinnate, the upper nearly simply pinnate, with 
