COULTER AND ROSE—NORTH AMERICAN UMBELLIFERAE. 189 
Often larger and more branching, with narrowly linear leaflets 1 to 4 
em. long. 
Type locality, ‘‘Hillsides of Coppermine Creek, New Mexico,” col- 
lected by Wright, no. 1107, in 1851; type in Herb. Gray, duplicate in 
U.S. Nat. Herb. 
From Colorado to New Mexico and Arizona. 
99 
Specimens examined: 
Cotorapo: La Veta Pass, Vasey, in 1884; Grays Peak, Patterson 42, July-August, 
1885; Table Rock, altitude 2,250 meters, Breninger, June 6, 1891, foothills, 
altitude 1,650 to 1,950 meters, Crandall, May 12-27, 1895; Leadville, altitude 
3,300 meters, Bethel, July 1, 1894; near Como, altitude 3,000 meters, Cran- 
dall, August 1, 1895; Pikes Peak, altitude 2,100 to 5,000 meters, Holzinger 10, 
1896. 
New Mexico: Type specimens as cited under type locality; Mogollon Mountains, 
Rusby 1483, August, 1881; Pinos Altos, Nealley 46, June, 1891; Big Hatchet 
Mountains, Mearns 39, May 17, 1892. 
Arizona: Palmer, in 1869; Willow Spring, Rothrock 253, July, 1874; San Fran- 
cisco Mountain, Anowlton 120, August 26, 1889; Willow Spring, Palmer 500, 
June 10-20, 1890; Fort Huachuca, Wilcox 481, September, 1894; Flagstaff, 
altitude 2,100 meters, MacDougal 256, July 8, 1898. 
Pseudocymopterus montanus purpureus (’. & R., le. 
Short caulescent, with rather weak ascending peduncles (7.5 to 15 
cm. long), and purple flowers. 
Type locality, ‘Fort Humphreys, Arizona;” collected. by Rusby, 
no. 632, July, 1883; type in U.S, Nat. Herb. 
Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico, and extending into Mexico. 
Specimens examined: 
Uran: Mount Ellen, Henry Mountains (altitude 3,300 meters), Bromide Pass 
(altitude 3,000 meters), Fish Lake (altitude 3,000 meters), and Marysvale 
(altitude 3,450 meters), Jones 0679, 5695, 5717, 5770, 5893, July 25-August 28, 
1894. 
Arizona: Palmer, July 4, 1869; Flagstaff and Mount Humphreys, Rusby 631, 632, 
July-August, 1883; Flagstaff, Lemmon, September, 1884; same station, Jones, 
August 13, 1884; San Francisco Mountain, Anowlton 74, 81, August 23, 1889; 
Cheno Valley, Toumey 192, June 24, 1802; 3uckskin Mountains, altitude 
2,700 meters, Jones 6056, September 19, 1894; Walnut Canyon and THum- 
phreys Peak, altitude 2,100 to 3,600 meters, MacDougal 332, 395, July-August, 
1898, 
New Mexico: Bear Mountains, Rusby 1474, May, 1881. 
2, Pseudocymopterus anisatus (Gray) C. & R., loc. L888. 
Cymopterus (?) anisatus Gray, Proc. Philad. Acad, 1862: 63. 1863, 
Acaulescent, cespitose from a much branched caudex, which is more 
or less covered with the remains of old leaves; leaves on long petioles, 
narrow, somewhat rigid, pinnate, and the leaflets pinnately parted into 
linear (sometimes broader) pungently acute segments; peduncles 1 to 3 
dm. high, exceeding the leaves; umbel unequally 5 to 12-rayed, with 
involucels of linear-subulate (sometimes lobed) bractlets exceeding the 
