sax fraga. SAXIFR AGACE.E. 193 



broadly campanulate, the tube adnate to the ovary, the lobes triangular 

 or triangular-ovate, obtuse, 3-nerved, about a line long, at length re- 

 flexed ; petals obovate, obtuse or notched at the apex, nearly 2 lines long, 

 strongly 3-nerved, the lateral nerves arising below the middle and con- 

 verging toward the apex ; filaments subulate, shorter than the petals ; 

 carpels flat, surrounded by a disk, becoming globose-ovoid, nearly dis- 

 tinct follicles 2-3 lines long, the short beaks strongly diverging : seeds 

 obovoid. more or less pointed at both ends. On wet cliffs along the 

 Columbia and Willamette rivers. 



S. elaytoniaefolia Canby, Small 1. c. 365. Perennial by a short hori- 

 zontal rootstock, slender, glandular-pilose above, glabrate below: leaves 

 fleshy, orbicular-elliptic, more or less oblique, 3-4 inches long, glabrate, 

 obtuse, entire, undulate, palmately 6-8-nerved, narrowed into a winged 

 ribbed petiole which is as long as the blade or longer : stems erect or 

 assergent 8-12 inches high, glabrate near the base ; inflorescence thyr- 

 soid-corymbose, its branches subtended by small linear or linear-oblong 

 bracts: calyx flattish. 1 line high, its lobes spreading and recurved, thin, 

 oblong, acute, 3-nerved, longer than the tube; petals white, spatulate or 

 obovate-spatulate, about 1 line long, slightb* emarginate or minutely 

 apiculate, gradually narrowed into a claw, marked with a stout mid-nerve 

 which gives off two lateral nerves about the middle ; filaments subulate, 

 shorter than the petals, incurved at the summit; carpels each ovoid, 1% 

 lines long, the short stout beaks strongly diverging; seeds irregularly ob- 

 long, reddish, smooth or very faintly striate. Damp crevices of rocks, 

 The Dalles, Oregon. 



S. nidiflca Greene Erj'th. i, 222. "Near S. integrifolia, but crown and 

 roots imbedded in a dense subglobose mass of small bulblets: leaves 

 ovate or obovate, entire or merely denticulate, an inch long, on dilated 

 petioles rather shorter : scapes 8-12 inches high, stoutish, glandular-hir- 

 sute : cymes several-flowered and pedicillate, forming a thrysoid panicle 

 toward the summit: calyx-segments ascending, oblong-ovoid, acutish and 

 mucronulate: petals round-obovate, not unguiculate. white: filaments 

 very short; anthers dull red : ovary very broad at summit, depressed and 

 even slightly concave: carpels not known." In wet springy places, east- 

 ern Washington to the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California. 



S. plaiitaginea Smail 1. c. "Perennial by a thick rootstock, stout, 

 scapose, glandular-pilose: leaves elliptic or elliptic-spatulate, 2— 4 inches 

 long^obtuse, undulate or distinctly and shallowly toothed, leathery, cili- 

 ate, 5-7-ribbed, narrowed into a winged petiole, which is usually much 

 shorter than the blade : scape erect, 8-10 inches tall, sparingly branched 

 near the top, the branches subtended by elliptic bracts ; flowers greenish; 

 in dense cymules ; calyx flat, its segments ovate, 2 lines long, obtuse, 3- 

 nerved, longer than the tube; petals suborbicular-oblong or some Li- 

 clined to be broadly spatulate, 1-2 lines long, greenish, shorter than the 

 calyx-segments, obtuse, marked with a midnerve and several branches 

 narrowed into a broad claw ; filaments converging, subulate, shorter than 

 petals ; ovaries immersed in a lobed disk, fruit not seen." Spokane, Wash- 

 ington. 



S. intergrifolia Hook Fl. i,249, t. 86. Glandular-pubescent through- 

 out ; leaves and stems from a somewhat woody caudex : leaves ovate to 

 oblong or lanceolate, usually obtuse, entire or* slightly sinuate-crenate. 

 somewhat membranaceous; stems 6-20 inches high, rather stout : flowers 

 many, in an elongated panicle, on short pedicels, clustered at the ends of 

 the branchlets of the narrow panicle; petals white, obovate, twice the 

 length of the glabrous spreading sepals; filaments short, subulate ; ovary 

 free: styles divergent: carpels united only at the base. In moist prairies 

 and wet places, Washington to California* 



