201 



Glandular-puberulent ; stems 6' to 2° high, usually naked; leaves 

 round-cordate, or occasionally reniform, ^' to 2' broad, crenately 5 

 or 7 lobed; calyx at time of flowering i" to i }4" long, obconical, 

 minutely glandular, lobes short, almost triangular; petals small, 

 broadly spatulate or obovate with a very short claw, usually a 

 little longer than calyx lobes. 



Nezv Mexico. — Fendler, No. 264 ; Santa Fe, Rothrock, No. 

 61 ; Santa Magdalena Mts., Vasey. Arizona. — Palmer. Colo- 

 rado. — Wolf and Rothrock, Nos. 804 and 805, Parry, No. 173, 

 Vasey, No. 218 and 219, Greene; Gray's Peak, Patterson, No. 

 32, Gray and Hooker; Lake City, Pease; Chian Caiion and 

 Ute Pass, Porter; Georgetown, Jones, No. 452 (distrib. as H, 

 Hallii); South Park, Coulter ; Pike's Peak, Rocky Mts., Parry, 

 Nos. 173 and 174, Thomas, Hall and Harbour, No. 204. Utah. 

 — Ogden; Wahsatch Mts., Hayden, Watson, No. 368; Bear 

 Valley, Palmer, No. 150. iWz/^^^.— Shockley, No. 249. /^Fj/^- 

 ;/;/;^^r_ Yellowstone Lake, Hayden; Laramie Plains, Sheldon, 

 No. 88 ; Yellowstone Park, Tweedy, No. 246 ; P^ort Bridger, 

 Leidy, No. 61. Oregon. — Nuttall (type). Montana. — Shield's 

 River, Scribner, No. 52a. British America. — Cypress Hills, Ma- 

 coun, No. 54; Milk River Ridge, N. W. T., Havard, Dawson, 

 No. 732. 



Alpine specimens of this species are smaller, with a shorter 

 and more compact panicle. 



ff Flowering calyx 2"-^" long. 

 * Inflorescence a loose, few-flowered raceme. 



18. H. RACEMOSA, Watson, Proc. Amer. Acad. xx. 365.(1885). 

 Glandular-pubescent; stems 4' to 10' high, bearing 2 or 3 

 comparatively large petiolate leaves ; leaves reniform to reniform- 

 cordate, crenately lobed and toothed, i' to 2' broad, the younger 

 leaves pubescent along the larger veins on the lower surface, and 

 beset with short scattered hairs on the upper surface, in some 

 plants the older leaves almost glabrous on both surfaces ; calyx 

 at time of flowering broadly campanulate, 2" to 3" long, glandu- 

 lar-puberulent or pubescent; petals linear-spatulate, occasionally 

 more or less laciniately toothed toward the top, but little longer 

 than calyx lobes. 



Washington. — Mount Paddo (Adams) Suksdorf; Mts. north of 

 EUensburgh, Brandegee, No. 765; Cascade Mts., Brandegee, No. 

 305 (distributed as "//. cylindrica, small form"). 



