PLANTEH FENDLERIANE. 29 
Torr.* The shoots of the season are purple, but become ash-gray the following year. 
The small leaves are green on both sides; the first which appear from the bud are 3- 
parted, but all the succeeding are quite divided into three subsessile leaflets, 
102. Necunpo acerorwes, Mench, var.? ramulis petiolisque cinereo-glaucis ; foliis 
omnibus trifoliolatis. — Mountains east of Santa Fé, on the creek, in low situations ; April, 
May. Large trees; the lower part of the trunk generally very knotty, which seems to 
arise from the many wounds the tree receives early in spring, in order to draw the sap 
from it, which is collected in cavities cut into the trunk a little beneath the wounded 
places. — There are fine male and female specimens, and also the fruit. 
CELASTRACEZ. 
7103. Srapnyrea trirotia, Linn. Twenty-five miles east of Council Grove. 
7104. CeLastrus scanpens, Linn. On the Upper Arkansas. 
105. Pacuystima Myrsinites, Raf. in Amer. Month. Mag. 1818. (Ilex? Myr- 
sinites, Pursh. Myginda myrtifolia, Nutt. Gen. 1. p. 109. Oreophila, Nutt. in Torr. & 
Gray, Fl. 1. p. 258, not of Don.) Var. mason (Myginda myrtifolia ~. major, Hook. Fi. 
Bor.-Am. 1. p. 120. t. 41, the right-hand figure), Valley of Santa Fé Creek, in the 
mountains, at the foot of precipices; May, June, in flower only. A foot high. Leaves 
thrice the size of those of the ordinary Oregon plant (which I have not seen so strongly. 
serrate as in Hooker’s figure), the larger even an inch and a half long, and more inclined 
to be acute ; the flowers also rather larger. 
2 RHAMNACES. 
106. Ceanoruus Fenp ert (sp. nov.)+ intricato-ramosissimus; ramis ramulisque 
teretibus gracilibus spe spinescentibus cinereo-puberulis demum glabratis Jevibus; foliis 
parvulis ($—2 unc. longis) ovalibus seu ellipticis obtusis integerrimis eglandulosis trinervi- 
is subtus sericeo-canescentibus supra glabriusculis viridibus; glomerulis densis sessili- 
bus; floribus glabris albis. — Mountains east of Santa Fé, in sunny places; June (in 
flower), and July, in fruit. Shrub about a foot and a half high and two feet in diame- 
ter. — Allied to C. depressus, Benth. Pl. Hartw. no. 29; but much more slender, the 
Thyme-shaped leaves smaller and not glandular, &c. Fruit about as large as in C. 
Americanus, 
* To this species belongs A. Douglasii, Hook.! Pl. Geyer, l. c. p. 77. t. 6; as already stated in Suppl. to 
Fl. N. Amer. p. 684. Geyer’s specimens, like those which I also have from Mr. Spalding, differ only in their 
larger leaves. 
