248 Utah Plants. . [ ZOE 
ERIGERON EATONI Gray, is a very variable plant, and occurs in 
varied situations from 6,000 feet to 8,000 feet altitude. It was dis- 
tributed by me years ago as &. fener. 
ERIGERON FLAGELLARIS Gray, I have with truly perennial 
roots. May 26, 1890, on the Pinal Mountains, Arizona 
TOWNSENDIA ARIZONICA X INCANA.  Bracts lanceolate, very 
acute, heads % inch long; pappus of ray scarcely shorter than that 
of the disk, heads sessile or pedunculate; leaves 1 to 134 inches 
long. I doubt that this is a hybrid, but it destroys one of the two 
species. I do not recall which is the older. Collected on the Lit- 
tle Colorado, in northern Arizona, June 9, 1890. 
GREENELLA ARIZONICA Gray, I have with all the upper part of 
the plant glutinous, as well as the heads. It is not branched at base; 
stems striate; leaves all linear (root leaves gone). 
ANTENNARIA DIOICA Gertn. var. CONGESTA, DC., seems to be 
a good species; the supposed rosulate leaves are outer bracts.closely 
united. It grows in mats an inch or two high; the inner scales 
have a tendency to livid in color; they are toothed or lanceolate at 
Francisco Mountains, northern Arizona 
ENCELIA FRUTESCENS Gray, I have with glandular heads and 
peduncles June 10, 1890, on the Little Colorado River, northern 
Arizona. 
VERBESINA SCAPOSA. Antherappendages ovate-lanceolate; style 
branches conical, hispid; corolla tube narrow at base and there a 
line long, then abruptly enlarged to nearly a line wide, and cylin- 
dric-campanulate; lobes ovate, short, yellow; anthers with a dark 
line running down the center; heads 34-inch high and 1 to 1% 
broad; proper scales imbricated in about two series, lanceolate, outer 
green hispid tip, all the chaff longer than the flowers; akenes obo- 
vate-oblong, exterior triquetrous, inner flattish, long-villous; margin 
narrow on the body of the akene but nearly a line high on the top, 
and white, deeply notched; pappus none; rays none; heads mono- 
