MEMOIRS FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF BOTANY OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 129 
Comparatively common in central California as far south as Santa Barbara. Speci- 
mens examined : 
California: J. T. Rothrock (Wheeler Exp.) No. 19; Kellogg & Harford, No. 212, 
1868: H. Edwards. 1877; Wm. Holder (Geol. Surv. Cal.), No. 2582; G. R. Vasey, 1875; 
C. C. Parry, 1887 and 1888; E. L. Greene, 1837; Alice Eastwood, 1894; 1895; Mary I. 
Bancroft. 
6. Horkelia Clevelandii (Greene) Rydb. 
Potentilla Clevelandii Greene, Pittonia, 1: 102. 1887. 
Horkelia Clevelandii Rydb. Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 25: 54. 1898. 
IntustRATions: Puate 61, f. 1-2; dissection of flower, f. 3; pistil, f. 4; stamen, f. 
5; fruiting hypanthium and calyx, f. 6. 
Stems several from a perennial root, simple, 2-4 din. high, finely pubescent, very 
rarely a little glandular above, often reddish tinged. Stipules ovate, 5-8 mm. long, 
often toothed. Basal leaves numerous, short-petioled; leaflets 7-11 pairs, densely and 
finely pubescent, not at all glandular, obovate-cuneate to nearly reniform, deeply cre- 
nate-toothed at the apex, entire at the base, 5-10 mm. long. Stem leaves smaller, with 
fewer cuneate or oblong leaflets. Cyme with rather short erect or spreading branches. 
Hypanthium finely pubescent, rarely little if at all glandular, cupulate with the depth 
about one-half the width; bractlets ovate, a little shorter than the ovate-lanceolate acute 
sepals. Petals spatulate-oblong, a little exceeding the sepals. 
It is a native of Lower California and the most southern part of California. A few 
specimens are a little glandular on the upper part of the stem, and approach H. cuneata, 
which the species most resembles in habit, while the pubescence is more like that of H. 
sericea, but shorter and finer. 
California: D. Cleveland, 1885; C. R. Oreutt, 1890; Parry & Lemmon, No. 102 
(in part); J. G. Lemmon, 1875: 'T. 5. Brandegee, 1893. 
Lower California: C. R. Oreutt, 1885; No. 905, 1885. 
7. Horkelia Parryi (Wats.). 
Horkelia Bolanderit Parryi Wats. Bot. Cal. 1: 182. 1876. 
InLustrations: Puarr 62, f. 1-2; dissection of flower, f. 3; pistil, f. 4; stamen, 
f. 5; fruiting hypanthium and calyx, f. 6. 
Stems numerous from a woody branched caudex, simple, 2-4 dm. high, grayish- 
strigose, not at all glandular. Stipules ovate to ovate-lanceolate, acute, mostly entire. 
Basal leaves numerous, densely appressed-silky canescent, pinnate ; leaflets 6-11 pairs, 
