126 
inches long, divaricately spreading on bracted pedicels 1-3 lines long, 
surrounded by a narrow, minutely crenulate margin. 
A California plant, but the exact locality unknown. The only 
specimen was detected in a bundle of " Cruciferm " in that portion 
of the Geological Survey collection which was deposited in the Uni- 
versity. The species is particularly well marked; and, by its narrowly 
winged seeds, is related to ffi". //^r^5/^rw«, Watson, but in size and 
habit it is more like CE. brevipes, Gray. The horizontally spreading, 
or a little deflexed capsules are peculiar, and suggest the specific 
name. 
BiGELOviA TRIDENT AT A.— Shrubby, glabrous and glutinous; foliage 
densely fascicled and clothing thickly the rigid branches ; leaves an inch 
long, coriaceous, narrowly cuneate, 3-toothed, or 3-cleft at the apex, 
the teeth or short lobes acute; heads short-peduncled, three-fourths 
of an inch long, racemosely or thyrsoidly arranged toward the ends 
of the branches; involucral scales in many ranks, with short, acute, 
more or less hispid-ciliolate and squarrose-spreading tips; akenes 
pubescent. 
Mixed with Bigelovia Menziesii in the Cedros Island collec- 
tion of Dr. Veitch. But it is so distinct from that species, both in 
general aspect as well as in technical character, that it is strange 
they should have been confounded. It is remarkable among Bige- 
loyi(B for its densely fascicled foliage, its hard, woody stems' being 
hidden by the abundance of leaves. Its inflorescence is nearly that 
of Applopappus sqtiarrosus, to which it has a stronger likeness, than to 
any Bigelovia. 
Bigelovia acradenia. — Shrubby and much branched, a foot or 
more high, glabrous and very glutinous; leaves narrowly oblanceolate, 
rigid, entire, an Inch or more long; heads corymbose clustered, 3-4 
lines long, 6-io-flowered; involucre narrowly campanulate, its scales 
regularly imbricated, their tips obtuse and bearing a conspicuous 
resmiferous gland beneath the epidermis; akenes turbinate, very silky. 
On the Mojave Desert, collected by Dr. Parry and the writer, 
September 1881. Closely related to B. Menziesii, but of very 
different habit, being diffusely branched, and forming comuact, 
rounded, broomy tufts. The heads are only half as high as those of 
that species, and have but half as many flowers, and the tips of the 
involucral scales, distended and filled with resin, are peculiar. 
Antirrhinum Kelloggii.— A foot or two high, glabrous and 
slightly glaucous, _ not at all glandular or viscid; leaves broadly 
lanceolate, 1-1.5 inch long, tapering to a short petiole; peduncles 
axillary, slender, twice the length of the leaves, but not prehensile; 
sepals lanceolate, 2 lines long; corolla .5 inch long, merely gibbous 
at base. 
Summit of the Sierra Nevada; Dr. H. Kellogg, July 20, 1870. 
An alpine^ species, to come between A. Kingii and A. strictum. 
Though simple and slender, with very long peduncles, it does not 
appear to be a climbing species, and Dr. Kellogg notes that it grows 
near snow, in patches by itself. The single specimen collected is 
young and without fruit; but it indicates a very distinct and in- 
teresting species. 
