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NEW PAPILIONACEAE. 85 



at first taken for B, ti7ictoria, of which it has somewhat the 

 mode of flowering ; though there is nothing Jse by which to 

 connect it with that species. Its aspect is more that of a 

 broad-leaved and axillary-flowered B, lanceolala. 



LupiNUS Clementinus. Perennial (?), 2 feet high, with 

 stems or basal branches decumbent, leafy throughout with 

 small leaves and everywhere rather shortly and roughly hirsute 

 with coarse hairs : leaflets about Y\ inch long, cuneate-oblong, 

 very obtuse, thin, alike green on both faces: racemes short, 

 subsessile, the flowers large, scattered : corolla f inch long 

 and as broad, deep purple ; keel petal narrowly falciform, 

 naked : half grown pods very densely hirsute-tomentose. 



Island of San Clemente. California, June, 1903, collected by 

 Mrs. Trask, who records it as occurring on only one particu- 

 lar part of the island. The plant is not known to a certainty 

 as being a perennial, but there are marks on the specimen 

 which seem to indicate it as being other than annual. 



LuPiNus HYACiNTHiNUS. Tall perennial, the several stems 

 upright or nearly so, leafy to the summit, there ending in a 

 sessile short raceme of large purple flowers, these but indis- 

 tinctly verticillate ; herbage rather dull-green by a short 

 stiffish but appressed pubescence, this longer and denser on 

 the upper face of leav^es : petioles short, about equalling the 

 leaflets, these about 7, oblong-linear, very acute, nearly 2 

 inches long : pubescence of rachis, pedicels and calyx denser 

 and less appressed, rather villous-hirtellous : lips of calyx 

 subequal, both entire : corolla f inch long, the banner shortest 

 of the petals, keel longest, somewhat strongly falcate, naked. 



San Jacinto Mountains, southern California, 22 July, 1897, 

 H. M. Hall, distributed as his n. 712. 



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