﻿rounded, upper leaves all sessile, oblong or narrower, 

 i' long or less by 2-2 .1" wide: heads short -peduncled; 

 whole plant ashy and very rank smelling. 



This grows in very dry places at the base of the 

 mountains. I also refer to this variety Ward's No. 560 

 from the same region. 



Tozvmendia montana Jones was again collected in 1894 



No. 5322f. May 30, 1894, Kingston, Utah, on basaltic 

 knolls, 5300 alt. 



No. 5315b. May 28, 1894, ten m ^ es south of Coyote, 

 Utah, on lava, 6500 alt. 



No. 5323. May 31, 1894, Marysvale, Utah, 6000 alt, 



This is the caaspitose form, with simple stems and large 

 flowers, 12" wide or less, with acuminate rays. To this 

 variety I also refer a specimen from Howell, collected on 

 the Columbia River, opposite Umatilla, April 29, 1882, 

 this specimen being in the National Herbarium. 



The typical form of To-^uicmlia fon'fer has ascending 

 and branching stems, with 2-4 long-peduncled, small 

 heads, about 6" wide and high, with rays 3-4" long; scales 

 ashy, strigose outside, and imbricated; pappus equal; not 

 more than a winter annual, about s¥ high ; flowers purple ; 

 leaves linear-spatulate, 3' long or less. 



Aplopappus linearifolius var. interior (Coville, 

 Biol. Soc. Wash. 7, 65, 1892). 



Aplopappus inter io7- Coville, 1. c. 



No. 5149U. May 3, 1894, Silver Reef, Utah, on rocks 

 at 3500 alt. 



No. 5060. April 14, 1894, Mica Spring, Nevada, in 

 granitic gravel, 4000 alt. 



No. 5Q45n. Same locality and date. 



