COCKERELL: NORTH AMERICAN SPECIES OF HyMENoxys 491 
9g. Goat Mountain, Raton, Aug., 1900, 7. D. A. & W.P. 
Cockerell, Basal leaves divided ; bracts like wzi/is, outer united at 
least half-way up ; pappus-scales white, achene-hairs slightly fer- 
ruginous. Raton is just south of the Colorado line, south of 
Trinidad, Colorado. The plant here gets well east of the front 
range. The large grasshopper Leprus cyaneus appears to have the 
Same distribution, z. ¢., only west of the front range in central 
Colorado, but passing east of it in northern New Mexico. 
10. Mountains S. E. of Patterson, 6000 ft., A. O. Wooton. 
Plant low, rays chrome yellow; achene-hairs shining brownish- 
white ; pappus-scales white, ferruginous at base. A bushy plant 
of rather peculiar aspect, with slender crowns; it is referred to 
var. intermedia, concerning which see below. 
Arizona.—1. Near Flagstaff, MacDougal 219. Achene- 
hairs pale ferruginous ; pappus-scales broad and not long-awned, 
 dullish white. This is subsp. avizonica. Also collected by /. W. 
Loumey at Flagstaff, Aug. 30, 1899, with achene-hairs white ex- 
cept at base. 
2. San Francisco Mountain, Sept., 1884, /. G. Lemmon. 
Achene-hairs pale ferruginous ; pappus-scales ferruginous, longish- 
pointed but short. Also subsp. avizonica. 
3. Western foothill region of San Francisco Peak, 5700 ft., 
July 3, 1901, /. B. Leiberg. Outer bracts divided below middle ; 
Pappus-scales short. Also subsp. arizonica. 
4. Williams, Aug. 28, 1884, JZ E. Jones. Also subsp. 
arizonica. 
5. Rim of Grand Cafion, Hance’s Ranch, 7500 ft., July 12, 
1892, E. O. Wooton. Heads larger than usual; outer bracts 
green and deeply cleft ; pappus, etc., as in subsp. ar/zonica, which 
itis. Also collected at same place and date by 7. W. Toumey. 
6. About Walnut Cafion, 7000 ft., July 28, 1898, MacDougal 
359. Slender pale plants; flowers quite orange; achene-hairs 
Pale ferruginous ; pappus-scales quite white, with ferruginous 
bases, fairly long-pointed; crowns slender. This is labelled P. 
intermedia Heller, but seems never to have been published. It 
should be collected in older material, when it would, I believe, be 
found to look like Wooton’s plant from S. E. of Patterson, N. M., 
which exactly agrees in the character of the disc-florets.* For the 
AROS cong tamaereme nt ee ee a ‘s eee 
*In the Gray Herbarium is some older material, confirming this opinion. 
