COULTER AND ROSE—-NORTH AMERICAN UMBELLIFERAE. 161 
Type locality, ‘Gates Canyon, Vaca Mountains,” California; col- 
lected by Jepson, June 20, 1892; type in Herb, Univ. Calif. 
Central California, in the bay region. 
Specimens examined: 
CALIFORNIA: Sausalito, Marin County, G. A. Vasey, in 1875. 
14. Angelica curtisii Buckley, Am. Jour, Sei. 45: 173. 1843. 
Glabrous, 6 to 9 dm. high; leaves twice ternate or the divisions 
pinnate, the uppermost mostly reduced to large inflated petioles; leaf- 
lets thin, ovate-lanceolate (2.5 to 7.5 em. broad), sharply and irregu- 
larly toothed; umbel somewhat pubescent, equally 15 to 25-rayed, 
with no involucre but with involucels of subulate bractlets; rays 5 to 
7.5 em. long; pedicels 8 to 12 mm. long; fruit broadly oblong, glabrous, 
4 to 8 mm. long, emarginate at base; dorsal and intermediate ribs 
acute and prominent, often somewhat winged; lateral wings thin, 
broader than body: oil tubes mostly solitary in the intervals, some- 
times 2 or 3. 
Type locality, “high mountains of North Carolina, especially the 
Bald Mountain in Yancey County:” collected by Jf A. Curtis; type 
in Herb. Gray. 
In the Alleghanies from Pennsylvania to North Carolina. 
Specimens examined: 
PENNSYLVANIA: Burgoon Gap, Blair County, Porter, Lowrie, Garber, September 
17, 1869, 
Virainta: Peaks of Otter, Bedford County, altitude 1,200 meters, 4. H. Curtiss, 
August 28, 1880; Salt Pond Mountain, Canby 92, August, 1890, 
Norra Caronina: Roan Mountain, altitude 1,710 meters, Chickering, August 5, 
1880; same station, altitude 1,800 to 1,900 meters, Merriam, September 9-11, 
1892. 
15. Angelica canbyi (. & R. Rev. N. Am. Umbell. 40, 1888. 
Glabrous throughout except the puberulent inflorescence, 6 to 9 dm. 
high; leaves bipinnate; leaflets linear to ovate, 2.5 to 5 cm. long, acute 
or acuminate, laciniately toothed; umbel rather equally 10 to 20-rayed, 
with neither involucre nor involucels; rays 2.5 to 5 cm. long; pedicels 
slender, 6 to 8 mm. long, glabrous or nearly so; flowers pinkish; fruit 
oblong, glabrous at maturity (densely puberulent when young), 6 mm. 
long; dorsal and intermediate ribs thin and very prominent, somewhat 
winged; lateral wings rather thin, half as broad as body; stylopodium 
conical: oil tubes solitary in dorsal intervals, in pairs in the laterals. 
Type locality, “low grassy ground along streams, Klickitat River, 
near Mount Adams,” Washington; collected by W. WW. Suhsdorf, no. 
763, flower June 26, fruit August, 1885; type in Herb. Coulter. 
Eastern Washington. 
Specimens examined: 
Wasurxcton: Brandegee 796, August, 1883; type specimens as cited under type 
locality; G. R. Vasey 301, 461, in 1889; Sandberg & Leiberg 420 in part, in 
1893; Blue Mountains, Wallawalla County, Piper 2335, July 15, 1896; same 
station, Horner 218, 219, July-September, 1897. 
