SUNFLOWER FAMILY 483 
mainly toward _ tip, the gt stems erect, 10-60 cm. high. mye and stolon — gl to 
elliptic-obovate or ovate o oval, 2.5-10 c pee a ssaduding the petiole, 1-5.5 cm. wide, ore 
obtuse and apicu he iste 1-3-nerved, pe brous or nearly so bia green cies: t inly or 
sionally somewhat densely gray-tomentose vereiatelltis beneath; cauline leaves similar in Bond 
cence, variable, broad or narrow, usually lanceolate, with acuminate callous tips; stem at first 
thinly arachnoid, later stipitate- -glandular particularly and often densely so above and in the in- 
florescence ; heads in open racemes or loose, paniculate or subcor anor cymes, the lower on 
peduncles often 2— . long, or hea crowded into close 
involucres cylindric-turbinate or subcampanulate, wr tial foe om or thinly arachnoid, 6-8 mm. 
igh, the phyllaries rather narrow, with pale greenish o e brownish body and inconspicuous, 
obtuse to acuminate whitish, bs aline ~ — involucres ene and broader, the phyllaries 
with obtuse, broader and somewhat more conspicuous, pale nish or whitish tips; achenes 
glabrous ; bristles ““ nmariate? pappus slightly or sometimes ce at all dilated above. 
Open woods and mountain slopes, Transition Zone anadian Zone; Alberta and British Columbia south 
through Washington and Oregon to mats a Trinity Counties California’ east to Idaho, Wyoming, and Mon 
tana. Type eabiy: “Alpine woods of the Rocky Mountains.”” May— 
5845. Antennaria marginata 5847. Antennaria racemosa 
5846. Antennaria howellii 5848. Antennaria suffru 
