THE AMERICAN BOTANIST 21 



where. A very interesting shurb with round, wliite-woolly 

 leaves that deserves a phice in ornamental plantings. 



94. Nauia Itisf'iila Gray (?). Common at Kndische. 

 Collected also as 141. 



98. WcdclicUa incanuita (I..) ckll. Common at Red 

 Lake. 



114. (iriiuli'lia stylosa Katon. Red Lake. A very 

 sticky composite. 



W'.J'crbesiihi cncclioides Cav. var. cxauriculata Robins. 

 and Greenm. Red Lake and Marsh Pass. 



128. Miimiliis Easlicoodiac Rydb. In open caves grow- 

 ing in crevices of the rocks at some distance from the entrance. 

 l>etatakin Cliff Ruin and Navajo creek. 



\34. Oreocarya sp? 



143. Astragalus sp. ? 



146. A triplex sp. ? 



Eriogo.mm Fkrrissit n. sp. Glabrous perennial with 

 numerous di or tri-chotomous stems from a branched semi- 

 woody candex, 2-3 dm. high : leaves fascicled-verticilatc at the 

 nodes and tips of the stolons, 3-5 or more in each cluster (the 

 dead leaves often persisting on tlic crowns of the caudex.) 

 >niall. ^/> cm. long, oblong-oblanceolate, acute at apex and 

 tapering cuneately into the slender petiole which is almost as 

 long as the jjlade except upw^ards w^iere they tend to become 

 bract-like and sessile : inflorescence mostlv 3-raved, somewhat 

 regularly proliferous a third and c\en a fourth time, the ray- 

 lets obscurely glandular pubescent, each terminating in a single 

 several-many flowered involucre ; flowers yellow on slender 

 pedicels, glabrous, the segments about 2mm. long, broadly 

 spatulatc with long tapering base. 



Number 10 c in I\Ir. Clute's Navajo Indian Reservation 



