250 Utah Plants. [ZOE 
Gitta Howarpt. Many stemmed from a perennial root, very 
leafy to the top; lower leaves obovate with a cuneate base and de- 
current into the petiole, leaves longer than the internodes; upper 
leaves 3 to 5-lobed with broad ovate lobes, not acerose; uppermost 
leaves bractlike, entire, ovate or lanceolate, contracted at base, 
nearly equaling the flowers; whole plant sparsely pubescent with 
glandular, woolly hairs; flowers logsely clustered; calyx nearly ses- 
sile, campanulate, 3 lines long, lobes subulate-lanceolate, longer 
than the tube; corolla purple, an inch long, tube very slender, but 
rather abruptly enlarged at the campanulate mouth, lobes 2 lines 
long, rounded, obtuse, erect; stamens much exserted. 
This plant has the habit of Gz/ia depressa, Jones, as to the leaves 
and heads. Collected by. Prof. Orson Howard on the mountains of 
southern Montana, at rather high altitudes, in 1884. The plant 
seems to be decumbent. 
GILIA LONGIFLORA Don., has the pods ¥% an inch long far sur- 
passing the calyx. 
GILIA MINIMA Gray, I have from Mormon Lake, near Flagstaff, 
Arizona, with the corolla 2 lines long; calyx 3 to 4 lines long, tips 
acerose and very unequal. June 4, 1890. 
PHACELIA INTEGRIFOLIA Torrey var. PALMERI Gray, I have 
with leaves not subcordate. June 16, 1890, at Lee’s Ferry, north- 
ern Arizona. 
KRYNITZKIA GLOMERATA, var. ACUTA. Nutlets raised into 
sharp, wing-like, toothed ridges, and intervening spaces muriculate. 
Collected May 2, 1890, at Cisco, Utah. 
ERIOGONUM THOmasII Torrey? Leaves tomentose on both sides, 
less so on the upper, orbicular-cordate, blade % an inch long; 
plant dichotomous just above the base, glabrous above the leaves; 
sepals oblong, obtuse, reddish or yellow with a reddish midrib. 
June 10, 1890, on the Moencoppa, northern Arizona. 
ERIOGONUM THURBERI Torrey. I have this with leaves gener- 
ally ovate with a cuneate base; plant glandular at the nodes; in- 
volucres angled and center of the outside sepals scarcely at all 
airy. The leaves are white-woolly below, more glabrous above, 
blade % an inch or less long, petioles shorter; plant 3 to 6 inches 
high. May 24, 1890. Mescal Mountains, central Arizona. 
