COMPOSITE. (COMPOSITE FAMILY.) 207 



*H- -Hv Not alpine, with leafi/ stems afoot or so high. 



3. S. megacephalus, Nutt. About a foot hif,'h, loosely floccose-woolly, 

 tardily ghibrate, leafy : leaves entire, lanceolate, or the radical spatulate lan- 

 ceolate and tapering into a petiole, and uppermost cauline attenuate, tliirki>li: 

 heads 1 to 3, short-peduncled, 8 lines to an inch hi^^ii ; involucre calyculate l»y 

 some very loose and subulate elongated accessory bracts: rays over k inch 

 long. — From the mouutaius of Idaho to the Kocky Mountains near the Brit- 

 ish boundary. 



H- -4- Heads rai/less, nodding : some sparse crisped hairs in phire of tuinentum. 



4. S. Bigelovii, Gray. Robust, 2 or 3 feet high, leafy up to near the 

 racemiform or simply paniculate inflorescence, at length glabrate : leaves from 

 elongated-oblong to lanceolate, denticulate or dentate, acute or acuminate; 

 radical and lower cauline 3 to 6 inches long, abrupt at base and naked-peti- 

 oled, or tppering into a winged petiole or partly clasping base ; up]jer lanceo- 

 late Avith partly clasping base : heads in small plants few or solitary. — Pacif. 

 R. Rep. iv. 111. Includes also var. Hallii, Gray. Mountains of Colorado, 

 Xew Mexico, and Arizona. 



* * Heads middle-sized or small, half-inch or less, 

 -t- Nodding, rayless: leaf ij -stemmed. 



5. S. Cernuus, Gray. Quite glabrous, 2 or 3 feet high : leaves lanceolate 

 or the larger oblong-lanceolate, entire, denticulate, rarely with a few scattered 

 coarser teeth, all tapering at base into a barely margined petiole, or upper 

 into a narrowed not clasping base : heads (4 to almost 6 lines long) several 

 or numerous in the panicle, most of them decidedly nodding: flowers pale 

 yellow. — Am. Jour. Sci. ii. xxxiii. 10. Mountains of Colorado, wholly below 

 the alpine region. 



-t- -I- Heads erect, inostlt/ radiate. 

 ■^ IStems numerousli/ and nearhj equahbj leafij to the top: leaves from entire to 

 laciniate-dentate, never divided or dissected, nor narrowly linear : glabrous or 

 very early glabrate. 



= Loiv, alpine : heads suhsohtary, radiate. 



6. S. Fremonti, Torr. & Gray. Many-stemmed from a thickish caudex. 

 a span to a foot high : leaves thickish, from rounded-obovate or spatulate to 

 oblong, 1 to 2 inches long, obtuse, obtusely or acutely dentate, .sometimes even 

 pinnatifid-dentate ; lower abruptly contracted into a winged petiole ; upper- 

 most sessile by broadish base : heads h inch high: rays 3 to 5 inches long. — 

 Fl. ii. 445. Alpine regions, from the British boundary to S. Colora»lo, Utah, 

 and California. 



Var. OCCidentalis, Gray. More slender, with rounder leaves and heads 

 longer-peduncled ; in high alpine stations becoming very dwarf, and flowering 

 almost from the ground. — Bot. Calif, i. 618. Mountains of X. Wyoming, 

 Montana, and California. 



= = Rather low, with numerous cymosely paniculate and small hrads, alnmys 



rayless. 



7. S. rapifolius, Xutt. About a foot high : leaves ov.itc <»r oblong, 

 throughout very sharply and unequally dentate, rather fleshy ; ratlical tapering 



