252 
BOTANY. 
cent; seeds 1" long, pitted. — Collected by Dr. Palmer near St. George on 
the Rio Virgen in Sontliern Utali ; 1870. 
Phacelia Menziesii, Torr. (Eutoca, R. Brown. DC. Prodr. 9. 294.) 
Annual, erect, 6-12' high, simple or much branched, hispid; leaves ses- 
sile, 1-2' long, oblong or linear, entire or 3-cleft or rarely pinnatihd, the 
divaricate lobes oblong or Hnear, entire ; flowers short-pedicelled ; calyx- 
lobes linear, acutish, hispid-ciliate, about equaling the corolla ; corolla blue 
or white, spreading-campanulate, 4-5" deep, appendages distinct from the 
filaments, very narrow and thin ; stamens included ; style bifurcate a third 
of its length, a little hairy ; ovary 16-m.any-ovuled ; capsule ovate, acuminate, 
2" long; seeds nearly black, pitted, J" long.— From Oregon and Washing- 
ton Territory to Nevada (Stretch) and Utah, (505 Fre'mont, Stansbury.) 
Eutoca heterophylla, Torr., in Stansbury's Report, is the same. West Hum- 
boldt Mountains, Nevada, and on Antelope Island and in the Wahsatch, 
Utah; 4,500-6,000 feet altitude; May, June. (875.) 
Phacelia sericea, Gray. {Eutoca, Graham. DC. Prodr. 9. 294.) 
Perennial, canescent wath a somewhat silky pubescence, appressed upon 
the leaves; stems erect, 1-2° high, rather stout, simple, terminating above 
in a narrow compound raceme ; leaves mostly oblong, 2-3' long, incised-pin- 
natifid, the segments coarsely cut or entire, the petioles narrow and hispid- 
ciliate ; racemes mostly short-peduncled, J-l' long in fruit, forming a com- 
pound raceme 3-12' in length; calyx-lobes linear, exceeding the pedicels, 
shorter than the corolla, which is 2h" deep, campanulate, blue or rarely 
white, persistent, the appendages conspicuous, nearly as long as the tube and 
distinct from the filaments ; stamens three times longer than the corolla, 
the anthers small and roundish; style united to above the middle ; capsule 
pubescent, ovate-oblong, acute, 3" long, about 16-seeded ; seeds J" long, 
pitted.— From the Rocky Mountains of British America (Bourgeau, Drum- 
mond) to Colorado and Southern Idaho, (Burke.) Frequent in the canons 
of the Battle and East Humboldt Mountains, Nevada, and also found on a 
ridge of the Uintas above the Duchesne River ; 6-9,500 feet altitude ; July, 
August. (876.) 
Phacelia (Eutoca) curvipes, Torr. Annual, dwarf, 2-3' high, soft- 
pubescent and somewhat pilose, branching from the base, the stems^spread- 
ing; leaves Innceolate-oblong, long-petioled, entire, i-2' long including the 
petiole which is oflen more or less abruptly curved ; flowers pedicelled, in 
