104 SYNOPSIS OF THE FLORA OF COLORADO. 
erect hairs, — than the calyx; seeds often olay, deeply pitted. 
—Hall & Harbour, 439. Georgetown, Dr. Smith. Denver, ’ Porter. Plains 
of the Platte, ine iter 
PHACELIA eben ‘Torr. DC. Pro “a u ’: Bs 299. Bids stoi erect, 
y glan ndu- 
lar pubescent ; leaves 1/-2/ Tans: varying froiti blog to avite cordate 
, Sil 
sometimes more or less deeply pinnatifid, and the segments often 
toothed, the upper at times nearly sessile; sepals ovate, “ciliate. hispid 
ar; corolik ment 
2 \ : style 
united to the middle; ovary oblong, hairy; capsule globose, minutely 
pubescent and glandular, equaling or slightly exceeding the calyx ; seeds 
4, minutely warted on the back and transversely ridged on the face. 
—Southeastern oat F. R. Ditfenderffer. 
big i Gr. Pacts. R.. Ki. Surv. 2 at p. 172, t. ID. Vass 
cidly p eet hictlaaone with spreading hairs stems 4/10 high, 
branehing from a biennial root; leaves bipinnately ’ parted or pinnately 
cut, ‘Jong, * iatands pinna atifid, 3-10” long, or the lower ones re- 
saat in size, lo bes 9-9, short, Pee ae spikes corymbose, densely- 
flowered ; segments of the calyx spatulate, about half the length of the 
white campanulate corolla and a little lon ger than the globose capsule ; 
stamens at length much exserted ; filaments naked ; seeds 4, oval, with 
the inner face strongly bilunate, the central keel very prominent, pitted, 
14” long. patos & Harbour, 446. Near Denver, Coulter. Gray’s Peak, 
Dr. Smit : 
ELIA TANAC Fat Oi Sone DC. Prod. 9, p.299. Annual, 3’-2° 
ct: 
nt, or the s 
1-2-pinnatifid, the 3-7 pairs of segments oblong and incised dentate ; 
ealyx-lobes linear or lanceolate, usually dilated and foliaceous above, 
very pilose, especially on the margins; corolla campanulate, 3’ long, 
searcely exceeding the calyx, the appendages se We and encircling the 
filaments ; style hairy at base, tea to below the middle; ovary 
hairy, 4-ovuled; capsule 2” long, ovate, acute, present seeds 13” 
long, ko. —Wet Mountain Valley, Brandegee. South Park, Coulter. 
PHACELIA NEO-MEXICANA, Tharber er., Bot. Mex. Bound. Surv., p. 143. 
Stem erect, “To. 2° ma hispidiy- ‘pilose and viscidly- pabes scent ; leaves 
a f long, Stekancisidancees lobes ovate, sahdentate: mo sty obtu {ise ; 
racemes spike-form, densely- petites: Cory ms mbose ; flowers subsessile ; 
calyx not enlarged in fruit, lo oblong ; corolla scarce twice longer 
than the calyx, small, oe enh a margin minutely erose-dentate ; 
stamens scarcely exserted ; et smooth; style eleft to the middle, 
hairy below ; capsule globo ose-ovate, 3 long ; s seeds s very minutely pitted, 
aeasiy 3 in length, 4 Plats of the Platte, Coulter. Garden of the Gods, 
PHACELIA SERICEA, Gr. (Butoca sericea, Grah. DC. Prod., 9, p- ones 
Perennial, canescent with a somewhat silk pubescence appressed u 
i 
the leaves ; stems 6’-2° high, rather stout, simple, terminating in a aie 7 
lo lor 
row, compound 1 rac eme; leaves mostly o ob ong, 2/-3' long, incised-pin- 
natifid, segments coarsely ¢ ut or entire, petioles hispid-ciliate; racemes 
- 
mostly s partie ores neled, 3-1’ long in fruit, forming a eS raceme, — 
_ 3-12’ in length; calyx-lobes linear, exceeding the pedicel 
edi shorter 
than the pie which is 5” long, campanulate, nine or rarely white, 
