YW 
94 SYNOPSIS OF TITE FLORA OF COLORADO. 
to the top, leafy; leaves uniform, almost plabroul thickish, obovate or 
oblong, hie Ba obtr — very entire or repand; pedicels short, alternate, 
viscous-pubescen well as the pom sepals ovate, sh rtly. acuminate 
or broadly fanned margins not searious; corolla purple, 7-9” long; 
tube cylindraceous, limb shortly Slipped: i ige lip deeply 2-lobed, 
lower lip deeply 3-lobed, with a hispid beard in the throat; sterile fila- 
ment dilated at the apex and bearded Deianeiting capsule scarce ex- 
sens the coy —* Mount Breckenridge on Blue River, west of the 
eee me on alpine region near perpetual snow,” fall & 
Harbor 39. “Bra gee. 
EMON 8, Dougl. Gr. Rev., l.¢., p. 72. Very glabrous, 
erect, neots n140 Magia? jie - “leas es obloug- jatiecoliee pene the upper 
sessile and lanceolate or somewhat ovate, all entire; flowers densely 
clustered in: an interrupted spike, the upper ayihes nearly sessile, 
crowded, often reflexed; sepals broadly lanceolate or ovate, margins 
white-scarious or erose- ‘dentate or laciniate, acute or produced into 
long green acumination; corolla 5/’-6” jong; sulphur-yellow, ae 
elite bilabiate ; sterile amass bearded. 
RULEO- Le cran Gr. Stems 6/-2° high; eorolla deep 
biuish:purple. —Hall & Ha a 391..Twin Lakes, Porter. Brandegee; 
B. H. Smith. Abundant throughout the “mountains in damp places. 
Mount Lincoln, at 13,000 feet altitude, Cor 
HIONOPHILA! JAMUSIT, Benth. Low, ec thick root-stock ; 
stem scape-form, 1/—4’ high, with a pair of leaves above the mi siddle, 
ferotis nat ted by a euaitiied ‘Apuie of flowers; ; radical aves tapering g mae 
the larger one which nearly sos Saf its. wers cules on very 
ack.— Hall & Harbour, 397. “High alpine , Pike’s Peak,” Meehan. 
Mount Lincoln, at 13,000 feet altitude, Coulter 
~ US LUTEUS, L.. DC. Prod. 10, p. 370. inate or viseid-puberu- 
lent, ascending or erect, 2/-4° high; leaves numerous, erose-dentate or 
daatienizte, orbiculate, ovate, or ‘suboblong, the lower long-petioled and 
often sublyrate, the upper sessile or cordate-amplexicaul, about 7- nerved, 
Shorter than the peduncles; calyx o ach becoming inflated in fruit, 
: a 
Mimvtv esi tetera ee rr., var. FREMONTI, Benth. Pedicel slender, 
ener tha an the leat flowers smaller.—Hall & Harbour, 399. Cherry 
Creek, near Denver, br. Smith. 
Moc. US FLORIBUNDUS, Gr. DO. Prod. 10, p. 372. Viseidly-pilose; 
stem aeoads 2/— 18 long, diffusely branching at the base, ascending; 
lebros petioled, 3/—i8/ lon pg, o ovate, dentate, or denticulate, lower sub- 
te, a oka pinnately 5-7 nerv as pedeitithes axillary to nearly 
 CHIONOPHILA, Benth. in DC. Prod. 10,p.1, 331. Calyx large, membranous, 4-5 toothed, 
the fifth tooth smaller. Tube of the corolla searce ly ly exsert; lips short, broad, u upper one 
emarginate, somewhat concave, lower. reading, short-trifid. Fertile stamens es] 
declined at base, at length ascending ; ant glabrous ; ‘cells confluent; filament 
the fifth stamen mnie searcely shorter than the others. x of the style slightly — 
sem ya cecelle, y e Apex yle sligh 
in once pts 
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