160 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 
11. Angelica leporina Watson, Proc. Am. Acad. 12: 252. 1877. 
Tall and rather slender, 6 to 9dm. high, glabrous; leaves bipinnate; 
leaflets linear to broadly lanceolate, acuminate, coarsely or laciniately 
toothed to entire, 2.5 to 7.5 em. long; umbel very unequally 10 to 25- 
rayed, with neither involucre nor involucels (or with a few deciduous 
bractlets); rays somewhat scabrous, | to 7.5 em. long; pedicels 4 to 6 
mm. long; fruit glabrous, very small, about 3 mm. long; dorsal and 
intermediate ribs prominent; lateral wings narrower than body; oil 
tubes solitary in the intervals, or the lateral in pairs. 
Type locality, damp soil, ** Rabbit Valley, [Southern] Utah,” alti- 
tude 2,010 meters; collected by ZL. /. Ward, no. 612, August 18, 1875; 
type in U.S. Nat. Herb. 
Southern Utah. 
Specimens examined: 
Uran: Type specimens as cited under type locality; southern Utah, Palmer 183, 
in 1877; Cottrell’s Ranch (altitude 1,800 meters), Mount Ellen, Henry 
Mountains (altitude 8,000 meters), and Elk Ranch (altitude 2,100 meters), 
Jones 5658, 5684, 6039, July-September, 1894. 
12. Angelica lineariloba Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. 7: 347. 1868, 
Stout, glabrous, 6 to 9 dm. high; leaves twice or thrice quinate; 
leaflets linear, 2.5 to LO em. long, cuspidately acuminate, entire or the 
lower ones 3-parted with the decurrent sometimes coarsely toothed 
lobes divaricate; umbels with neither involucre nor involucels; rays 
2.5 to 5 em. long; fruit oval-oblong, glabrous, 8 mm. long, 4 mm. 
broad; dorsal and intermediate ribs filiform; lateral wings thickish, a 
little narrower than the body; oil tubes solitary in the dorsal intervals, 
in pairs in the laterals. 
Type locality, ‘* Ostrander’s Meadows, Yosemite Valley,” California, 
altitude 2,400 meters; collected by Bolander; type in Herb, Gray. 
Sierra Nevada of southern California. 
Specimens examined: 
CALIFORNIA: ‘‘Southern Sierras,”’ altitude 2,850 meters, Rothrock 355, September, 
1875; near Mineral King, Sierra Nevada (Tulare County), altitude 2,750 
meters, Coville & Funston 1479, August 4, 1891. 
13. Angelica californica Jepson, Erythea 1: 8. 1893. 
Stems about 12 dm. high, glabrous, with puberulent inflorescence 
and leaves; leaves once or twice ternate then once or twice pinnate; 
leaflets ovate, about 5 cm. long, the terminal one mostly 3-lobed, the 
lower often lobed or divided at base, all irregularly serrate with 
mucronulate teeth; umbel with numerous unequal rays, and neither 
involucre nor involucels; rays 2.5 to 15 cm. long; pedicels about 6 
mm. long; fruit oblong, 8 to 9 mm. long, glabrous, with winged 
dorsal and intermediate ribs, and lateral wings not as broad as body; 
oil tubes mostly 3 in the intervals. 
