prin, Except in the broadly-winged fruit, this plant does not 
A igs to differ essentially from P. biternatum, Nutt. 
- ‘Taasrrum monranum, Gray, Fl. Fendl. p. 57? On a mountain 
bordering the Salt Lake. Fl. May 25. One speciinen has a_per- 
ed with several spreading scapiform stems, which 
are (in the flowering state) from five to eight inches long. The 
whole plant is very glabrous and somewhat glaucous. The leaves ; 
are a omc cut, with oblong, acute, entire, or incised 
The 
yellow flowers are in dense umbels, with numerous ‘ 
rays. There is no inyolucre, and the involucels consist of 7-9 a 
linear-lanceolate leaflets. The carpels of the young fruit are “s 
furnished with five broad, undulate wings. The vitte in the in- m 
ervals seem to be solitary, or sometimes double. 
Aster ostonerroutus, Nutt.—Stansbury’s Island, Salt Lake, 
June 26. 
ErraEron maga Mes: and Gray, Fl. 2, p. 174.—Valley e 
of Salt Lake, May 30 a 
Drereria PuLvervtentA, Nutt. in Torr. and Gray, Fl. 2, Pe 
191.—Green River, Sept. 12. 
Soumaco Missovurrensis, Nutt—With the preceding. 
ae 
Linosyris viscrprrLora, Torr. and Gray, Fl. 2, p. 234—var, . 5 
SERRULATA; ramulis scabriusculis; foliis anguste linearibus triner- 2 
- 
rymbosis subquinquefloris; squamis eet: 
glabris subquinquefariam imbricatis Jlaxiusculis, exterioribus multo _ 
brevioribus, corollis glabris—Valley of the Salt Lake. ss he 
GRINDELIA ge? Sa P eters —Bear River, near the Hot and ie 
Cold Springs. Fl. May 1 ease 
STENoTUS CSPITOSUS, Nutt. in Torr. and Gray, Fl. 2, oP i 
238.—Valley of the Salt Lake. ae : 
Amprosta coronopiroutA, Torr. and Gray, Fl. 2, p. 291.— "Se 
Table land at the northern extremity of Salt Lake Valley, cae ae: ib 
Larnamra Sranspurn, Gray, Plant. Wright, 1, p. 101 and 129, i 
_ Monothrix Stansburiana, Torr. in Stansb. Rep. ed. 1, p. 390— __ 
Sate iB x oh * 
