841 
Ligule longæ, marginales latiuscule, extus stria lata rubro-pur- 
purea vittate, dentibus in lig. omnibus + rubris. 
Anthere polline + replele. 
Stylus et stigmata livescentes. 
Achenium fusco-stramineum apice muricato-spinulosum, ceterum 
fere leve v. minute tuberculatum, c. 4 mm. longum, 1 mm. latum, py- 
ramide c. 0,9 mm. longo, rostro 8—9 mm. longo et pappo albo. 
Syd.: Ravine near Kvanhauge (J. Hartz & C. H. Ostenfeld, 1897). 
Geogr. area: Regio alpina and subalpina of the Scandinavian mountains. 
Mr. Dahlstedt writes: »The form found in a ravine near 
Kvanhauge seems to me to be the same as T. naevosum Dahlst., 
a hitherto undescribed species, which is rather common in the al- 
pine and subalpine parts of the Scandinavian mountains. The in- 
volucres and the fruits of the Faroese form are quite like those of 
the Scandinavian one, but the leaves differ in lacking the purple- 
spots and the coarse hairiness on the upper side. In Scandinavia 
similar forms have been found here and there and always growing 
in shadow; they want the spots, but very seldom the coarse hairs, 
although sometimes very sparsely occurring. 
T. naevosum differs from T. spectabile, var. maculiferum by longer, 
more patent outer phyllaries, shorter achenes, shorter beak (pyramid), 
but longer rostrum and developed, more or less abundant pollen. 
var. (?) bipinnatifidum (Rostr.) Dahist.; T. obliquum Fr., var. bi- 
pinnatifidum Rostrup, Færôernes Flora, 1870, p. 51. 
A forma primaria foliis valde et profunde laciniatis laciniis del- 
toideis valde laciniato-dentatis omnibus in apicem elongatum attenuatis. 
Sandö: At the dune at Sandsbugt (C. A. Feilberg & E. Rostrup, 1867). 
»Of this very peculiar form only three fruiting individuals have 
been collected, and it is therefore difficult to examine the characters 
of the involucre and the phyllaries. It seems to agree with the 
main species as regards the phyllaries. The achenes also are simi- 
lar to those of the main species, but they are somewhat longer and 
more coarsely denticulate towards the top. The leaves bear the 
same characteristic hairiness of the upper side as the Scandinavian 
species of the main form. Of this last specimens from open and 
sunny places have deeply and narrowly laciniate leaves, which come 
rather near to the leaves of the Faeroese form, but are easily di- 
stinguable by their wanting the laciniation of the second order 
(»bipinnatifidus«), highly characterizing the Færoese form. This diffe- 
