542 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE NATIONAL HERBARIUM. 
2. Mertensia amoena A. Nels. Bot. Gaz. 30: 95. 1900. 
Mertensia bakeri amoena A. Nels. in Coulter, New Man. Rocky Mount. 422. 1909. 
TYPE LocALITy: Monida, Montana. 
Rance: Wyoming to northern New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Sierra Grande (Standley 6153). Mountains, in the Canadian Zone. 
3. Mertensia amplifolia Woot. & Stand]. Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb. 16: 165. 1913. 
TyPeE Locaity: Glorieta, New Mexico. Type collected by G. R. Vasey, June, 
1881. 
Rance: Known only from type locality, in the Transition Zone. 
4. Mertensia lateriflora Greene, Pl. Baker. 3: 18. 1901. 
Mertensia bakeri lateriflora A. Nels. in Coulter, New Man. Rocky Mount. 423. 1909. 
TYPE LOCALITY: Carson, Colorado. 
RanGE: Mountains of Colorado and northern New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Sierra Grande (Standley 6151, 6152). Canadian Zone. 
5. Mertensia fendleri A. Gray, Amer. Journ. Sci. II. 34: 339. 1862. 
Mertensia lanceolata fendleri A. Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. 10: 53. 1874. 
TyPE LOcALITy: Santa Fe Creek, New Mexico. Type collected by Fendler (no. 
625). 
Range: Northern New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Chama; Sierra Grande; Sandia Mountains; Santa Fe and Las Vegas 
mountains; Jemez Mountains. Mountains, in the Transition Zone. 
6. Mertensia cynoglossoides Greene, Pl. Baker. 3: 19. 1901. 
TYPE Locaity: ‘On moist ledges in the Black Cafion,”’ Colorado. 
RanGE: Colorado to northern New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Chama (Standley 6523). Shaded damp thickets, in the Transition 
Zone, 
7. Mertensia pratensis Heller, Bull. Torrey Club 26: 550. 1899. 
TYPE LOCALITY: Meadow in Santa Fe Canyon, 9 miles east of Santa Fe, New Mexico. 
Type collected by Heller (no. 3641). 
Rance: Colorado and New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Tunitcha Mountains; Chama; Taos Mountains; Santa Fe and Las 
Vegas mountains; White and Sacramento mountains. Meadows and thickets, in 
the Transition and Hudsonian zones. 
8. Mertensia grandis Woot. & Standl. Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb. 16: 165. 1913. 
TypPE LocaLity: Hillsboro Peak, Black Range, New Mexico. Type collected by 
Metcalfe (no. 1319). , 
RaNnGE: Mountains of southwestern New Mexico. 
New Mexico: Hillsboro Peak; Mogollon Mountains. Transition Zone. 
4. LITHOSPERMUM L. Puwuccoon. 
Hispid or hirsute perennial herbs with alternate sessile leaves and leafy-bracted 
spikes or helicoid cymes of flowers; calyx of 5 narrow sepals united only at the base; 
corolla salverform or funnelform, the tube mostly longer than the sepals, yellow or 
greenish, sometimes crested or pubescent in the throat; stamens short, included; 
nutlets hard and bony, ovoid, smooth and shining, attached by the base to the nearly 
flat receptacle. 
