72 PROCEEDINGS OP THE ACADEMY OF 



i 

 Mountains, 402. Collixsia farvifolra, Nutt. 80. Limosella aquatica, L. 

 Apparently just the European plant. "Low mountains." (403, 404. See 

 Polernoniace?e.) 



405. Stnthtris flantaginea, Benth. Parry's 254, with a little P. alpina, 

 Gray, Parry's 255.* 40G. Veronica serpyllifolia, L., an elongated form. 

 407. V. alpina, L. 40S. V. Americana, Schweinitz. 



409. Castilleia beeviflora, Gray, Enum. PL Parry, No. 243, and p. (338) 

 45. Euchroma, Nutt. " Hi^h alpine." 410. C. Integra, Gray. 411. C. pal- 

 lida, var. miniata, Kunth., Gray, 1. c, (often with laciniate leaves,) with a 

 dwarf form of C. pallida having purple bracts, Parry's 239 t 412. C. pal- 

 lida, the C. septentrionalis, Lindl. 4l3. Oiithocarpus luteus, Nutt. 414. 

 Pedicularis racemosa, Benth. " Subalpine ; common in pine woods." 

 415. P. crenulata, Benth., in DC. Prodr. " Subalpine and alpine, South 

 Park." This species was known only from very poor specimens col- 

 lected by Fremont. These are good ones, but of a more dwarf and alpine 

 form ; stems only 6 to 9 inches high, glabrate, except some decurrent 

 lines of pubescence ; the leaves smaller and narrower. Corolla in the dried 

 specimens of a deep violet-purple. 416. P. Canadensis, L. "In the moun- 

 tains of middle elevation ; " not before known in this region. 417. P. brac- 

 teosa, Benth. 418. P. procera, Gray, Enum. PL Parry, No. 252. 419. P. 

 Grcenlandica, Retz. P. surrecta, Benth., varying from 4 to 16 inches high, 

 and also in the length of the beak. 420. P. Parryi, Gray, PL Parry, No. 251. 

 421. P. Sudetica, Willd. var. Like the specimens of the preceding year; 

 and Dr. Parry also collected a more dwarf state. "Flowers red." 422. 

 Rhinaktuus Crista-galli, L., var. minor. 



LABIAT.E. 



423. Hedeoma hispida, Pursh. 424. H. Drummondii, Benth. 425. Mentha 

 Canadensis, L., var. glabrata. 426. Salvia trichostemoides, Pursh. Proba- 

 bly a form of 5. lanceolata, for which Bentham takes it. 427. S. Pitcheri, 

 Torr. 42s. Monarda aristata, Nutt. 429. Lopuanthcs anisatus, Benth. 

 430. DRAcocErHALrit paevifloeuji, Nutt. 431. Scutellaria resinosa, Torr. : 

 pubescent and glabrate forms. 432. S. GALERicrLATA, L. 



BORRAGINAC2E. 



433. Echinospeemcm Redowskii, Lehm., and a depauperate, diffuse or pro- 

 cumbent form of Eritriciiicm Californicum, DC. 434. Erjtrichu'm crassi- 

 sepalum, Torr. and Gr. ; the specimens hispid with rough, spreading hairs, 

 and the aohenia granulate, and also a more upright and narrower-leaved 

 species, with pointed and smooth achenia, the same as Fendler's 635, named 

 by Torrey E. micranthum, sp. nov., and afterwards in my herbarium referred 

 to E. angustifolium, Torr., which it hardly is. I think it is also Uryptanthus 

 hispidus, Nutt., ined. 435. E. Jamesii, Torr. Very well marked by the 

 smooth ami acute-angled achenia, the section of each just a quadrant of a 

 circle. 436. Heliotlopium (Euplcca, Nutt.,) convolvllaceum, Gray. 192. 

 H. Curassavicum, L. Doubtless indigenous. 437. Echino.-pekmum florj- 

 bukdum, Lehm. 438. Eritrichu'M glomeeattm, DC. ; a fine virgateform, like 

 Fairy's 288, and a form with shorter and more branched inflorescence. 

 (439, see Hydrophyllacere.) 440. E. aretioides, DC. Beautiful specimens, 

 like those of Parry's 278 in 1861 ; some of them Aretia-like, and only an 

 inch high ; others with elongated flowering stems two inches high. While 



*The latter, again copiously collected by Dr. Parry, in the high alpine region, holds its charac- 

 ters. (The leaves are sometimes rotund-ovate and manifestly cordate.) But a suae <jf specimens 

 supplied by Mr. Hall shows gradations between the two. 



f Parry's i'40. again sparingly collected in the alpine region, is a similar form rf C. pallida, with 

 a short galea and bright red bracts, occasionally parti-colored with white: his 2i2 a dwarf, pale, 

 alpine foim, C. occidtittalit } Torr. 



[Mar. 



