First Report on the Flora of Wyoming. 1 1 9 



EUBIACE^. 



Galium boreale, L. Sp. PI. 108 (1753). 



On every fertile mountain hillside and every valley in the great- 

 est profusion. 



Sybille Creek, July 8, 1894 (No. 3-t3); Table Mountain, June 30, 

 1895 (No. 1384). 

 Galium trifidum, L. Sp. PI. 105 (1753). 



Common in wet places, as on the occasionally flooded banks of 

 slow flowing streams. 



Silver Creek, August 24, 1894 (No. 1115); Centennial Valley, 

 August 19, 1895 (No. 1763). 

 Galium triflorum, Michx. Fl. i, 80 (1803). 



Not common, collected on a wet, shaded hillside. 

 Centennial Valley, August 17, 1895 (No. 1693). 



VALERIANACE^. 



Valeriana edulis, Nutt.; Torr & Gray, Fl. ii. 48 (1841). 



Very plentiful in the wet meadows bordering the Laramie River. 

 Fisher Ranch, June 19, 1894 (No. 262). 



Valeriana Sitchensis, Bong. Veg. Sitch. 145. 



Fine specimens were secured at Clark's, but not observed else- 

 where. 



Upper Wind River, August 10, 1894 (No. 793). 



Valeriana sylvatica, Banks; Richards Bot. App. 730 (1823). 



On wooded hillsides and in wet valleys in the Laramie Moun- 

 tains. This species is very abundant. 



Telephone Canon, June 15, 1894 (No. 228). Observed in a 

 large number of other places. 



COMPOSITE. 



Brickellia grandiflora, Nutt. Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. vii, 287 (1841). 

 Coleosanthiis grandiflorus, (Hook.) Kuntze. 

 Frequent on hillsides near the Platte and its tributaries. 

 Fairbanks, July 10, 1894 (No. 423); Cummins, July 30, 1895 

 (No. 1687). 

 Kuhnia eupatorioides, L. Sp. PI. Ed. 2. 1662 (1763). 

 Infrequent ; Laramie, September 1893. 



