Nelson Some New Western Plants and Their Collectors. 39 



long, slender, blue or purple-tinged : achenes broadly linear, with minute 

 sparse pubescence. 



This handsome conspicuous species was collected by Mr. Garrett on the 

 mountains of Parley's Canon, Utah, September 13, 1906. Type No. 2083. 



Antennaria solstitialis J. Lunell sp. nov. 



Stems slender, floccose-woolly, 5-12 cm. high, surculose, broadly tufted : 

 stolons 1-3 cm. long : leaves silvery appressed-pubescent on both sides : 

 the basal oblance-spatulate, 5-6 mm. long; the stem leaves with looser 

 pubescence, 8-14 mm. long : heads 5-7, in a glomerate capitate cluster ; 

 involucre 4-5 mm. high, obconical or campanulate, each head with a 

 linear-acuminate bract as long or longer than the head ; involucral bracts 

 from oblong (exterior) to suborbicular (within). 



*v In the type locality it cotrtes into blossom late in June, and occurs spar 

 ingly in dry, sunny situations. The other species occurring there are A. 

 aprica Greene, which blossoms two weeks earlier, and A. campestris Rydb. 

 which is four weeks earlier. A. microphylla Rydb. also occurs, but from 

 that species, its nearest relative, A. solxlitialis differs in its smaller leaves, 

 shorter stolons, the congested inflorescence, and the scarcity of pistillate 

 plants (none have yet been found). A. microphylla has narrowly oblong 

 heads, at least in the fertile plant. 



The above characters have been taken from manuscript supplied by the 

 collector, Dr. J. Lunell, who secured the specimens near Leeds, N. D. The 

 type sheet bears the accession No. 39,137. 



University of Wyoming, 



Laramie, Wyoming. 



