86 LEAFLETS. 



Miscellaneous Specific Types. — 11. 



Garrya mollis. Branches of the fourth and third seasons 

 back dark-green or purplish and obscurely puberulent ; all the 

 younger quite hoary with a thin tomentum : earliest leaves of 

 newest twigs round-obovate, very obtuse or even emarginate, 

 1 inch long, the later and more usual 2 inches long, exactly 

 elliptical, acute at both ends, all quite plane, very pale with 

 bloom, and further whitened on both faces by a thin but dense 

 silky tomentum : bracts of young undeveloped aments tri- 

 angular-ovate, cuspidately acute, equally white-tomentulose 

 with the foliage : fruit unknown. 



Collected by Mr. G. A. Pearson, at an altitude of 5000 feet 

 in the San Francisco Mountains of northern Arizona, 8 August, 

 1909. The whiteness of this shrub, a characteristic which is 

 due to a heavy bloom, intensified by an almost white soft- 

 silkiness, will place it in marked contrast to all other known 

 members of its genus. 



Crepis aculeolata. Acaulescent, 2 feet high, with thin 

 glabrous foliage, the scapiform flowering stem glabrous to 

 above the middle : leaves 8 inches long, the broad blade and 

 slender petiole of about equal length, blade oblong-oval, obtuse, 

 lightly runcinate-dentate, the base ending very abruptly and 

 subhastately : heads rather few and large in a corymbose 

 terminal cyme, the branches of this, also the stem from some 

 distance below it, the pedicels of the heads and the bracts of 

 the involucre armed with dark-colored stout straight prickle- 

 like hairs each with a small gland at summit ; heads J^ inch 

 high, bracts 20 or more, linear, acuminate ; flowers numerous. 



Collected somewhere in Utah, presumably southward, in 

 1875, by Lester F. Ward ; his n. 606 as in U. S. Herb. 



Crepis fallens. Acaulescent, 1>4 feet high, glabrous, 

 pale green, glaucescent : leaves of the thinnest texture, 6 to 8 

 inches long, of a somewhat elongated obovate outline, rather 



