CATALOGUE. 213 
reflexed in fruit. Closely resembling P. pusilla, but with twice larger flowers 
and fruit, and the capsule (1" or more in length) more protruded. Discov- 
ered by Bigelow at Benicia, Cahfornia. Salt Lake Valley, near the mouth 
of Jordan River ; June. (749.) 
Plantago Patagonica, Jacq., Var. gnaphalioides, Gray. From Texas 
to Sonora and California, northward to Western Wisconsin and Washington 
Territory. Salt Lake Valley and on Antelope Island ; May-July. (750.) 
PRIMULACE^. 
Primula Parryi, Gray. Amer. Jour. Sci., n. s., 34. 257. Leaves ob- 
lanceolate, narrowing to a broad fleshy petiole, and with tlie rest of the plant 
somewhat glandular-scabrous, at least upon the margin, which is entire or 
denticulate with short glandular teeth; leaves of the involucre subulate or 
linear, unequal, acute, several times shorter than the elongated pedicels ; 
calyx-lobes broad-lanceolate, acute, equaling the tube of the pink corolla ; 
corolla-lobes rounded, obcordately 2-cleft or cmarginate. — Leaves in 
length and scape 4-16' high, with 6-15 flowers upon unequal pedicels i-3' 
long ; flowers rose-color, becoming purple in drying. Eocky Mountains of 
Colorado. Frequent in moist cold localities in the East Humboldt and Clover 
Mountains, Nevada, and in the Uintas ; 8-11,000 feet altitude; July-Sep- 
tember. (751.) 
Andeosace septentrionalis, L. DC. Frodr. 8. 52. Annual, acaules- 
cent, somewhat scabrous-pubescent ; leaves rosulate, lanceolate or lanceolate- 
ovate, denticulate, with a broad petiole ; scapes numerous, many-flowered ; 
leaflets of the small involucre narrowly lanceolate, acute ; calyx-lobes ovate- 
lanceolate, acuminate, equaling the small white corolla. — Very variable in 
size ; leaves long, the 3-20 scapes J-4' high, and the G-20 pedicels 
nearly as long. From the Saskatchewan to the Rocky Mountains, and north 
to latitude 68° ; Behring Strait ; Rocky Mountains of Colorado. I"];isl Hum- 
boldt and Clover Mountains, Nevada, and frequent in the Wahsatch and Uin- 
tas ; 6,500-10,000 feet altitude ; June-September. (752,) and the more 
reduced alpine form, (753.) 
Androsace occidentalis, Pursh. Snuiller than ordinary forms of the 
last, with fewer scapes and flowers, broader leaves and involucral leaflets, and 
larger and more foliaceous calyx-lobes. From Illinois to Arkansas and \\ est 
