ESCHSCHOLTZIA. 235 
acute, the others obtusish: calyx thinnish, ł inch long, the 
ovoid body with a stout taper-point: corolla not large, 14 inches 
wide, orange-color : stamens many, with slender-subulate fila- 
ments: stigmas 4, unequal: torus tubular-funnelform, with 
but narrow and thinnish reflexed rim. 
Species of the lava beds of southeastern Oregon and north- 
eastern California, known only in flowering specimens collected 
in 1893, partly by Mrs. Austin on the Yainax Indian Reserva- 
tion, and by Mr. M. S. Baker in Modoc Co. Calif. 
19. E. APICULATA. Stoutish low perennial, the decumbent or 
ascending branches 6 to 10 inches high, sparingly leafy except 
at base; herbage somewhat glaucous, glabrous except as to the 
manifestly scabrous-ciliolate petioles of all the leaves; segments 
of the last rather broad and little divergent, even somewhat 
overlapping, the ultimates apt to be spatulate-oblong and acut- 
ish: calyx of almost exactly ovate outline abruptly and rather 
stoutly pointed, the apiculation of half the length of the body, 
the whole rather more than 4 inch long: corolla light-orange, 
1t or 13 inches broad, rather widely expanding; stamens indefi- 
nite, the filaments yellow, linear, as long as the anthers: pods 
large for the plant, 24 inches long; torus under them short 
and subcampanulate, showing a manifest inner hyaline nerve- 
less margin and a distinct not broad outer rim. 
Gravelly places along the streams near Kelseyville, Lake Co., 
Calif., C. F. Baker, 9 May, 1903; type in my herbarium, under 
Mr. Baker’s n. 3088. 
20. E. GRANULATA. Rather low decumbent perennial, quite 
copiously leafy, glaucescent, the petioles and branches not only 
on the angles but upon the whole surface roughened with a 
minute crystalline-granular indument: dissection of leaves 
somewhat open, the ultimate segments spatulate-oblong and 
oblong, acutish: earlier peduncles scapiform, stout, sharply 
angular and striate, 3 or 4 inches high and equalling the foliage: 
calyx thin, ovate-oblong, abruptly very short-apiculate, 7 or 8 
