236 BOTANY. 



Su-bda depeessa, Watson.— Salt-works in South Park, Colorado I 267) ; 

 and also the var. eeEcta, Watson, 1-2 C high, branches short and leaves 

 narrow (276), South Park. 



Teloxys* coenuta, Torr.— Erect, low herb, simple or branched; leaves 

 (with petiole) 6-18" long, lanceolate, sinnate-pinnatifid, the usually per- 

 fect flowers £-1" in diameter j calyx resinous-dotted and the lobes keel- 

 crested. — Mount Graham, Arizona, at 9,000 feet elevation (737). 



Kochia Americana, Watson (Proc. Amer. Acad, ix, p. 93).— 

 Nevada. 



Chenopodium Fbemontii, Watson.— Twin Lakes, Colorado (253); 

 Mount Graham, Arizona, at 9,000 feet elevation (747) ; Utah. 



Chenopodium album, L.— Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. 



Chenopodium olidum, Watson {Chenopodium album, in King's Report 

 v, p. 287 in part).— Differs from C. album in the smaller leaves, the more 

 loosely panicled, close clusters of flowers, and in the large seed being 

 closely adherent to the calyx.— Twin Lakes, Colorado (258). 



Chenopodium ambrosioides, L., var. anthelminticum, Gray. — Old 

 Camp Goodwin, Arizona, at 3,000 feet elevation (343). 



Chenopodium leptopiiyllum, Nutt. {Chenopodium album, var. Icptophyl- 

 lum, in King's Report, v, 287).— Valley of the Arkansas, Colorado (264). 



BuTUMf rubrum, Reich., var. humile, Moquin {Blitum polymorphum, 

 var. humile, in King's Report, vol. v, p. 288).— Hot Springs of San Luis 

 Valley, Colorado (water about 80° Fahr.) (272). 



Blitum capitatum, L.— Colorado (269, 271). 



Blitum glaucum, Koch {Chenopodium glaucum, L, Gray's Man.).— 

 Colorado (260, 261, 254). 



Monolepis ciienopodioides, Moq.— Twin Lakes, Colorado (256). 



* TELOXYS, Moquin.-" Flowers perfect or sometimes pistillate. Calyx 5- (rarely 4-) parted, the 

 lobes more or less prominently cariuate and subcrested. Stamen 1 (5, Moquin) or wanting. Ovary 

 ovate : styles 2, free or united at base. Fruit partially covered by the loosely appraised calyx ; pericarp 

 membranous. Seed lenticular, with a crustaceoos testa.— Herbaceous annuals, erect and diffuse- the 

 minute solitary flowers very shortly pedicelled, axillary and terminal upon the repeatedly dichotomous 

 nearly naked branches; terminal (lowers abortive and deciduous, leaving the ultimate brancblets 

 spmulose; leaves thin, alternate."— Watson, Revision of North American Chenopodiace*, Proc. Amer 

 Acid. vol. ix, p. 90. 



I BLITUM differs from ChenopODITJM in having (he seed vertical and the calyx destitute of appen- 

 dages. * 



