﻿To this I also refer the two doubtful specimens: 



No. 5095aj- April 23, 1894, f our miles above Pagum- 



pa, Arizona, 5000 alt., in gravel. 



No. 5264c. May 19, 1894, near Smithsonian Butte, 



Utah, 5000 alt., in gravel. 



BlGELOVIA TURBINATA. 



No. 6066c. September 24, 1894, Canaan Ranch, 

 Utah, 5000 alt., in gravel. 



This species seems to be next to B. juncea. Bracts 

 5-6 in each row, the lowest minute and often loose, all 

 obtuse or only apiculate, and all with a darker center, as 

 if keeled, oblong to linear, innermost 4" long and 2" wide, 

 shorter than the flowers ; pappus white ; corolla oblanceo- 

 late-cylindrical, with minute, ovate, appressed lobes; 

 style appendages filiform; anther tips nearly linear: 

 plants glabrous and a little glutinous even to the flowers ; 

 leaves sparse, long, canaliculate, uppermost reduced to 

 mere rudiments. This has the habit of the allied species, 

 being about 4 high, in a rounded, bushy tuft or shrub, 

 and grows on clay soil on the borders of an old sink. 



No. 5847a. August 21, 1894, Marysvale, Utah, 6500 



No. 6106k. October 7, 1894, divide north of Beaver, 

 Utah, 7000 alt. 



No. 6052k. September 17, 1894, Buckskin Mountains, 

 Arizona, 9000 alt., in gravel. 



No. 5912. August 27, 1894, Marysvale, Utah, 7000^ 

 alt., in clay. 



Usually with green stems, rarely whitened; heads 

 viscous; leaves linear to filiform; all the bracts long- 



involucral leaves: flowers rather inclined to occur in 

 heads or short corymbs, fully equaling the leaves, light- 



