296 CATALOGUE OF MR. GEYER'S PLANTS 
This has narrower leaves than any authentic specimen of Dr. Torrey's 
Pulmonaria alpina ; but it does not appear to be otherwise specifically 
distinct. 
Coldenia? (Sect. Stegnocarpus) Nuttallii; annua procumbens dicho- 
toma, foliis fasciculatis longe graciliterque petiolatis rhombeo-ovatis 
acutis hispidis, floribus axillaribus glomeratis, calycibus hispidis 5- 
partitis segmentis hispidis subulatis.—Tiquilia parvifolia, Nutt. MS. 
Has. Rocky Mountains, Nuttall, in Herb. Hook. On decomposed 
calcareous rocks in the sandy desert of muddy rivers near the great 
salt-lake Timpanagos. Never seen before nor afterwards. August. 
Flowers red. Geyer. n.80. a 
Flores in dichotomiis ramorum sessiles aggregati, foliis floralibus et brac- 
teis suffulti. Folia floralia longe petiolata, ovata, margine revoluta, 
venosa, pilis rigidis canescentia. Bracteæ subulatæ, hispidæ, apice 
pilis rigidioribus 1-2-aristatæ. Calyces 5-partiti, foliolis subulatis 
hispidis. Corolla infandibuliformis, tubo intus basi 5-squamato, 
fauce nuda, limbo patente 5-lobo. Stamina 5 parum inæqualia, 
prope basin tubi supra squamas inserta, tubo inclusa. Ovarium 4- 
lobum. Stylus intra lobos ovarii insertus, profunde bifidus, ramis 
apice capitato-stigmatiferis. Nucule 4, non acuminate, ultra medium 
usque ad insertionem styli cohærentes, maturitate solutæ, nitidæ, 
glabræ. Embryo exalbuminosus, cotyledonibus bipartitis, radicula 
accumbente cotyledonibus paulo longiore. Benth. 
I am indebted to Mr. Bentham for the above note, drawn up from 
Mr. Geyer's imperfect specimens. It is unquestionably the Tiguilia 
(Coldenia) parvifolia of Nuttall’s MS., but as there is a species evi- 
dently of the same genus in my herbarium from Peru, with much 
smaller leaves, I venture to change the name. A more complete 
analysis of this curious plant would probably prove it to belong to 
Dr. Hooker's genus Ga/apagoa, published in Linn. Trans. vol. xx. : 
p. 196, as does also the Coldenia dichotoma of Lehmann (Litho- 
spermum dichotomum, R. e£ P. ¢.111), and C.? canescens, De Cand., 
and the small-leaved Coldenia from Peru above mentioned. 
LABIATR. 
1. Monarda fistulosa, L.—8. mollis, Benth. in Hook. Fl. Bor. Am. 
v. 2. p.112. M. menthæfolia, Graham, in Bot. Mag. t. 2958. 
Has. Thickets and rough places in the fertile parts of the Platte 
valley. July, August. ». 9. 
