7<5 BOTANY. 



Calyx clef) to the middle, segments broadly ovate, acute. Corolla an inch 

 in diameter; purple (in dried specimens). Carpels pilose, dehiscing on the 

 back from the Bummil to the base." — (T. & G.) Utah. 



Sphceralcea Fendleri, Gray. — San Francisco Mountains, Arizona and 

 Utah. Taller, more branching, with larger leaves, and beaked carpels. 

 New Mexico. — Forming a transition in some of its forms into the next. 

 S. incana var. dissecta, Gray, now comes here. 



Sphceralcea angustifolia, Spach, "var. joins lanceolatis, inferioi ibus 

 nunc hastato-sub-trilobatis" Gray. — Sanoita Valley, Arizona. CG34.) The 

 plant is erect, somewhat branching at the top; flowers arranged in con- 

 tracted racemose panicles on the ends of the branches; leaves with the 

 characteristic, eroded margins. A showy plant. My specimens were found 

 growing in dry lava soil. (Those of Wright came from alluvial soil.) 



Sphceralcea Emoryi, Torr. (PI. Wright. 1, p. 21). — Nevada and 

 New Mexico. In Benth. and Hook. Genera Plantarum, we find Malvas- 

 trum and Sphceralcea in different sub tribes and separated by eleven inter- 

 polated genera, yet considering the habit of Sphceralcea incana, var. dissecta, 

 and the resemblance between S. Emoryi and Malvastrum Munroanum, 

 coupled with the broader generalization of Bentham and Hooker under 

 head of Spharalcca, as to the resemblance in habit, it may well be doubted 

 as to whether the genera should not (in part at least) be thrown together. 

 Colorado, New Mexico. 



Hibiscus denudatus, Benth. (Bot. Voy. Sulph. p. 7, tab. 3). (/?. involu- 

 cellatus, Gray, PI. Wright. 1, p. 22.) — One or two feet high, with a few 

 long, thin branches; leaves distant, 1-2' long, £-£' wide, obtuse, irregularly 

 crenate serrate, petioles 3-6" long: petals light purple, 8-10" long; bracts 

 of the involucel setaceous, 9" long ; entire plant, except the flower, denser) 

 covered with a stellate pubescence. (562.) Cienega, Ariz, (near Tucson). 



Thurberia* thespesioides, Gray (PI. Nov. Thurb. p. 308). — Perennial, 



• THUBBEBIA, Gray (PI. Nov. Tlnirb. 308). — Braoteoles 3, cordate. Calyx truncate. Stamiueal 

 column produced above [almost to the apex] into many filaments. Ovary 3-celled with a few ovules 

 [ti-8] in each cell ; style dab-shaped at the apex. [Stigmatose on the three projecting angles.] Capsule 



loitllicidul, 3-valved. Seeds obovoid, angular, minutely woolly, without albumen ; embryo conduplicate. 

 cotyledons folioceous, covered with block spots, much folded, almost including the inferior radical. — Tall, 

 smooth loilis. Leaves entire or :'> parted. Flowers white or lose colored, solitary on axillary or terminal 

 peduncles. — GRAY in BKNTHAM A. HOOKER, Gen. PI. 1, p. 209. For a much more full descriptiou, see 

 Gray, PI. Thurb. /. r. , aud for a good figure of this, the only speciesof the genus, see Hut. Mex. Bound, pi. 6. 



