﻿long as the leaves, rarely more, often less, 4-6 flowered: 

 flowers 9" long, dirty purple or white; calyx lobes subu- 

 late-triangular, the lower about equaling the tube which 

 is 1 h" long; fruit half-elliptical, 2' long; whole plant 

 smooth, plants straggling upwards from 3-6 high, among 

 oak brush. This plant which is very common through- 

 out Utah at middle elevations varies but little. I refer 

 here also Miss Eastwood's specimen, No. 1, from Du- 

 rango, Colorado, and Ward's specimen from Utah col- 

 lected in 1875. L. pane ill or us may be a starved form of 

 this species, but from the imperfect material of that species 

 it is impossible to tell what its limits are. 



Ivesia Ctohcnsis var. camfiestris. 



No. 1624. Whitney Meadows, Sierra Nevada Moun- 

 tains, California, 8500 alt., August 19. Coville. 



Young leaves silky, long-villnus ; narrow leaflets 2I" 

 long or less; plants less glandular, but otherwise the 

 same, though a little more slender and leaflets not com- 

 pacted. 



Amelanchier alnifolia var. Utahensis (Koehne, 

 Die Gattungen der Pomaceen. Berlin, Ostern, 32, t. 2, 

 1890). 



No. 520 4 d. May 10, 1894, Cedar City, Utah, in gravel. 

 6000 alt. 



No. 5224m May 15, 1894, Rockville, Utah, in red 

 sand, at 3500 alt. 



Xo. 5286k. May 22, 1894. Kanab, Utah, 5300 alt.. 

 on sandstone rocks. 



No. 5149I. May 3. 1894, Silver Reef, Utah, on slopes, 

 3500° alt. 



1 large number of speci 





and elevations show all sorts of variations in this most 

 variable species, the variations being due to aridity and 



