154 SYNOPSIS OF THE FLORA OF COLORADO. 
Spreng. )—Hall & Harbour, 688; Parry. Wet Mountain Valley, Br wai 
Sierra Madre Ran ge, Gothic Mountain and Mountain of the Holy Cross, 
Coulter 
ASPLENtus SEPTENTRIONALE, L. Fronds tae from tufted root- 
stocks, 3’-5’ high, on very long stipes, erect; pinnz 2-4, narrow, linear, 
aor entire at “base, with 2- several setaceous ivi isibis at the summit. — 
ee li Harbour, 689. Grand Caiion of the Arkansas, Brandegee; Red- 
“ola TRICHOMANES, L.—Grand Caiion of the Arkansas, 
Brandeg 
ony aes EBENEUM, Ait.—Green Horn Mountains, H. L. Greene. 
ASPLENIUM FILIX-F@ MINA, Bernh.— Hoopes 
ae oe icicle Fée.—Hall & Harbour, 695. 
ASPI { FILIx-MAS, Swartz. Hall & Harbour, 687. Grand Cafion 
of the aNisiant. Bigidine. Along the foot-hills west of Denver, Coul- 
ter. 
key Stabe FRAGILIS, Bernh.—Hall & Harbour, 690; Canby. South 
Park, Porte et Mountain Valley, Brandegee. Bear Creek, near Den- 
ver, | Mount Lincoln, at 12,000 feet altitude, Twin Lakes and White House 
ecripett Coul 
SIA at ade nest Eaton. gee a pene Liaha'e, w ereeping stalks 2/-4/ 
high ‘chatty at at the eru e the rachis and under 
‘ace of the a with minute Pinas fics pe stalker pe 
feeurdla lanceolate, 4!-8! long, pinnate; pinne numerous, ’ long, 
pinnatifid with 10-16 short ovate or oblong erenulate or ‘oakyed divis- 
ions; indusium very delicate, deeply cleft into lacinie, which de thie 
= “nt hairs composed of irregular cylindrical cells.—Colorado, fide 
. Hat 
A OREGANA, Eaton. Canby. Chiann Cation, South Park 
~ and ater! Arkansas, Porter. Meehan. Wet Mountain Valley, Brandeget. 
Long’s Peak and Twin Lakes, Coulter. Grand Cafion of the Arkansas, 
Redfield. 
BoTRYCHIUM VIRGINICUM, Swartz.—Grand Caiion of the Arkansas, 
Brandegee 
LYCOPODIACE ®. 
LYcoPoDIUM ANNOTINUM, L.—White House Mountain, Coulter. 
SELAGINELLA RUPESTRIS, Spring.—Sierra ] ee Range, Coulter. 
n rocks, in Glen Eyrie and South Park, Port 
MUSCKH. 
By Leo LEsQuEerReEux, Esq. 
The mosses here enumerated and described were collected in Gobiratio 
Territory, by Elihu Hall in 1865, Major Downie in 1868, Prof. Thos. 
: orter, and by the assistants of Dr. F. V. Hayden and myself 
in 1872 and 1873. A few mentioned in Hayden’s Report of 1872, from 
the mountains north of Colorado, and in Watson Catalogue, from Utah 
and the Uintas, all species likely to be found in Col ab Territory, 
are cir Considering that none of the botanists who have gathered 
aterials made in their researches a specialty of this class of 
meas, which mostly grow in deep and dark ravines of difficult 
