[Vor. 5 
54 ANNALS OF THE MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN 
Winsor's Raneh, Pecos River National Forest, alt. 3655 m., 
13 July, 1908, Standley 4351 (U. S. Nat. Herb., C. C. Deam 
Herb., and Mo. Bot. Gard. Herb.); Las Vegas, July, 1881, 
Vasey (U. S. Nat. Herb. and Greene Herb., Univ. of Notre 
Dame); Las Vegas, 23 and 24 June, 1891, Dewey (U. S. Nat. 
Herb.) ; foot of mountains along Santa Fé Creek, twelve miles 
above Santa Fé, June and July, 1847, Fendler 478, 480 [444] 
(Gray Herb., Berlin Herb., U. S. Nat. Herb., Torr. Herb., 
Phil. Acad. Nat. Sci. Herb., and Mo. Bot. Gard. Herb.), TYPE; 
Sandia Mountains, Whipple's Expl. for a Railway Route 
from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, 10 Oet., 1853, 
Bigelow (Gray Herb. and U. S. Nat. Herb.) ; Santa Fé Cañon, 
alt. 2435 m., 26 June, 1897, 4. A. Ф E. С. Heller 3774 (Gray 
Herb., Greene Herb., Univ. of Notre Dame, U. S. Nat. Herb., 
and Mo. Bot. Gard. Herb.); Santa Fé Сайоп, 3 Oct., 1913, 
Rose, Fitch & Parkhurst 17754 (U. S. Nat. Herb. and Mo. 
Bot. Gard. Herb.); Santa Fé Cañon, 6 Aug., 1910, Wooton 
(U. S. Nat. Herb.) ; among rocks and bushes, Sandia Moun- 
tains, July and Aug., 1914, Miss Charlotte C. Ellis 342 (U. S. 
Nat. Herb. and Mo. Bot. Gard. Herb.); Sandia Mountains, 
4 Aug., 1910, Wooton (U. S. Nat. Herb.) ; El Capitan Moun- 
tains, alt. 2285 m., 28 July, 1910, Baker, Earle € Tracy 208 (U. 
S. Nat. Herb. and Mo. Bot. Gard. Herb.) ; Mescalero Reserva- 
tion, White Mountains, 21 July, 1905, Wooton (U. S. Nat. 
Herb.); Wills Сайоп, Sacramento Mountains, 20 Aug., 1901, 
Wooton (U.S. Nat. Herb.) ; James Cafion, Sacramento Moun- 
tains, 6 Aug., 1905, Wooton (U. S. Nat. Herb., Mo. Bot. Gard. 
Herb., and Univ. Ariz. Herb.). 
(?) Kansas: without locality, Prof. Snow (U. S. Nat. Herb. 
No. 49321). 
Var. molestus Greenm. var. nov. 
Stems 2 to 3.5 dm. high, branched, sparingly floccose- 
tomentulose; basal and lower stem-leaves obovate to oblan- 
ceolate, including the petiole 2 to 9 em. long, .5 to 2 em. broad, 
rounded to submucronate at the apex, crenate-dentate to sub- 
entire, at first slightly tomentose, soon becoming glabrous or 
nearly so; uppermost stem-leaves similar, sessile, dentate or 
