326 umbelliferjE. 



Am. Acad. vi. 537 (1865), under Splmxiiosciadium. Stout, 2 — 5 ft. high, 

 glabrous except the tomentose inflorescence: leaves large, bipinnate, 

 with dilated petioles; leaflets few, 1 — 2 in. long, oblong to linear-lanceo- 

 late, laciniately lobed or coarsely toothed: umbels 6 — 8-rayed; umbellets 

 capitate and globose, 3 — 6 lines thick: fr. cuneate-obovate, }4 ^^- long; 

 carpels strongly ribbed, the lateral wings broader than the 3 dorsal; oil- 

 tubes solitary, the seed with corresponding shallow grooves. — Banks of 

 streams in the higher Sierra, from Mono Co. northward to Donner Lake. 



3. S. eryg:iiiifoUum, Greene, Pittonia, ii. 102 (1890). Stoutish, 1}4 ft. 

 high : stem and bladdery-dilated petioles glabrotts, the leaves roughish- 

 pubescent and the inflorescence white-tomentose: leaves bipinnate, 

 rather small; leaflets ovate, acute, J^' in. long or less, with rather stiffly 

 setaceous recurved tips and teeth: fr. unknown. — In the vicinity of the 

 Yosemite, 1889, Elmer Drew. 



19. ANGELICA, Braunschweig. Perennials, stout and tall. Seg- 

 ments of the large pinnately or ternately compound leaves broad, 

 toothed; petioles dilated. Umbels many-rayed, nearly or quite naked. 

 Flowers white or purple. Calyx-teeth minute or obsolete. Fruit ovate or 

 oblong, strongly flattened dorsally, with a very broad commissure, 

 margined by a broad somewhat scarious wing; dorsal ribs prominent, 

 more narrowly winged; oil-tubes solitary or in pairs in the intervals. 

 Face of seed plane or slightly concave. 



1. A. toiiieiitosa, Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xi. Ill (1876). Hoary-tomen- 

 tose, or the stem in age glabrate: leaves quinately bipinnate; leaflets 

 firm, ovate, acute, very oblique at base, 2 — 4 in. long, the lower sometimes 

 lobed, serrate with unequal acute teeth: iimbels naked, often dense; rays 

 1 — 3 in. long: fr. 3 Imes long, broadly elliptical, the lateral wings thin, 

 the dorsal acutish: seed thin, plane on the face, channelled on the back 

 by the impressed dorsal oil-tubes. — Rocky banks of streamlets among the 

 hills from Mendocino and Napa counties southward. 



2. A. Breweri, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 348 (1868). Glabrous or 

 finely puberiilent, 3 — 4 ft. high: leaves ternate or quinate and pinnate; 

 leaflets lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, 2—3 in. long, sharply serrate, the 

 teeth cuspidate, the lower somewhat lobed: peduncles long, sometimes 

 bearing 1 or 2 dilated subscarious bracts; umbels naked; rays 2 in. long: 

 f r. pubescent, oblong, 4 lines long, the lateral wings narrow, corky, the 

 dorsal obtiise, not prominent; oil-tubes usually 6 (the dorsal or lateral 

 in pairs), besides 2 — 4 on the face: seed more or less concave on the face, 

 the oil-tubes forming deep channels on the back. — In the Sierra Nevada, 

 from Mariposa Co. to Plumas. 



3. A. liiieariloba, Gray, 1. c. 347. Glabrous, stout, 2—3 ft. high: 

 leaves twice or thrice quinate; leaflets 1—2 in. long, linear, cuspidately 



