CATALOGUE. 185 
Virginia City, (Bloomer.) Common in wet places throughout Nevada, and 
probably through Utah, though collected only in Parley's Park; 4-8,500 
feet elevation; June-September. Very much like the Eastern G. ulig- 
inosmi, but has broader leaves and is more densely woolly. (G46.) 
Antennaria margaritacea, E. Br. Canada and Newfoundland, south- 
ward along the Alleghanies, and westward to Alaska, Oregon, and Califor- 
nia. Cottonwood Canon in the Wahsatch ; 6,000 feet elevation ; July. (G 47.) 
Antennaria Carpathica, E. Br. Csespitose ; stems simjile, the ster- 
ile ones not stoloniferous ; radical leaves narrowly oblanceolate, acute, 3- 
nerved, villous-tomentose on both surfaces ; upper leaves gradually smaller ; 
heads in a capitate terminal corymb ; involucre woolly at the base, the scales 
brownish, with paler crisped and scarious shining tips, more acute in the 
fertile than in the sterile heads. — Arctic America to Labrador and the Sas- 
katchewan. Wet mountain-side in the Havallah range, Nevada ; 7,000 feet 
elevation ; June. Plant usually 4-6' high. (648.) 
Var. PULCHERRiMA, Hook. Considerably taller than the typical form, 
(9-8' high,) silvery -tomentose ; corymb rather lax ; involucral scales of 
firmer texture, the tips white, not crisped. — Swamps among the Eocky 
Mountains of British America ; Colorado, (Hall & Harbour.) East Hum- 
boldt and Clover Mountains, Nevada ; 9-9,500 feet elevation ; August, Sep- 
tember. (649.) 
Antennaria alpina, Gsertn. Casspitose, producing stoloniferous flower- 
less stems ; flowering stems 2-8' high, simple ; leaves 6-9" long, white- 
tomentose, the radical ones spatulate, the cauline linear ; heads 3-7, nearly 
sessile in capitate clusters ; involucre somewhat woolly at the base, the scales 
olivaceous with paler and erosely-denticulate narrowed tips, rather obtuse in 
the sterile heads, but acute in the fertile ; pappus of the sterile flowers 
strongly clavate. — Arctic America to Labrador, Alaska, California, and Col- 
orado ; Greenland, Norway, &c., but not in the Alps. East Humboldt 
Mountains, and at the head of Bear Eiver in the Uintas, often by the shores 
of small lakes ; 9-10,000 feet elevation ; August. (650.) 
Antennaria dioica, Goertn. In habit very similar to the last, but the 
leaves sometimes becoming smoothish on the upper surface, clusters more 
lax, and heads often more numerous; involucral scales broader and firmer, 
the lips ochrolcucous or white, but varying to rose color and to olivaceous j 
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