NEW SIMXII.S OF CALIFORNIAN PLANTS. 429 



collected by Mrs. R. M.Austin, in the Cascade Mountains, 

 Oregon. Mr. Willis L. Jepson kindly compared (lowers 

 from the same plants with the types at the Gray Herbarium 

 and reported them as identical. 



The description of the fruit was made from specimens 

 collected by Mr. Brandegee, at the Calaveras Grove of 

 Big Trees. The plant figured was collected by the writer 

 at Sequoia Mills, Fresno County, May 20, 1894. The 

 description was made from specimens from that place, 

 also from some collected by Mr. Brandegee at Frazer's 

 Mills. It seems to be the southern analogue of C. occi- 

 dentale, Gray, and grows in the timber belt of the south- 

 ern Sierras, at an altitude of from 5000 to 6000 feet. 



These^ type specimens are all in the Herbarium of the 

 California Academy of Sciences. Duplicates have been 

 sent to the Gray Herbarium and to the National Herba- 

 rium. 



EXPLANATION OF PLATES.* 



Plate LIII. 

 Sedum Blochmanoe. 



A. Entire plant, showing the manner of growth and flowering. 



B, C, D and E. Petal, calyx, stamen and petals magnified. 



Plate LIV. 



Anemone Californica. 



A. This is a composite of two plants, one haying lower leaves without 



a stem and the other possessing a stem 1 . u t no lower leaves. The 

 fragmentary material made this necessary. It was not reduced 

 and is a little larger than the plant figured. 



B. One of the involucral leaves spread out to show the divisions. 



C. An open flown, about natural size. D. Pistil magnified ten diameters. 



Plate LV. 

 ffosackia ro8i << . 



A. Part of a plant showing (lie manner of growth and flowering. 



B. The standard magnified to show the shape of t lie Made and claw. 



* These drawings were designed for the new series of the Proceedings, 

 the pages of which are to be a little larger; so, with the exception of Plate 

 liv, they are all reduced more than was originally intended. 



