, NEW PLANTS OF NORTHERN ARIZONA. 301 
o 
wings developing; vittæ 4-5 in the intervals, 8 upon the commissure.—Whole plant 
purplish; near C. terebinthinus, Nutt. New Mexico wages 1869). Northern Arizona 
(Mrs. E. P. Thompson). In naen shaded soil; Mar 
re pene NEWBER so, glabrous or somewhat viscid- 
pubes ; lea vate blong i in outline, s5 2! long, shorter than the petioles, pin- 
nately neea upper ae 3-lobed, the lower 2-lobed and sessile, lobes sparingly 
cised; peduncle exceeding the leaves; aa naked, unequally 4-8-rayed; involu- 
poa foliaceous and a aiei the 4-8 very unequal segments oblong, acute or obtuse, 
mostly exceeding the flowers; calyx-teeth ovate to linear-lanceolate, acute; petals yel- 
low; disk broad; fruit glabrous, ovate, Pie the short pedicels.— Remarkable for 
its conspicuous foliaceous inyolucels. Fru mature, but gta WRG grown “ge "a 
its character. New Mexico (Dr. em RE on te Moxioan Boundary Survey); North- 
ern Ari 
ANGELICA Tall and stout, Saisi puberilent; eyo biternate; leaf- 
lets Se lohan » 2-3! er ng, acute, incisely serrate, the teet and mucronulate, 
middle leaflet yetichitate; inyolucre and involucels none; os ease unequa 
ng; pedice hi ite; i 
becomin 
elliptical, 3” long, subpubescent, the dorsal wings thick, narrower than the lateral 
eeg (Wheeler 
F A FLAVESCE NS. (Garrya ——?, Watson, King’s Rep. 5, 421).— Pubesce 
cilky, a appressed leaves e ee a = — set at each end, entire, ead 
above, margin revolute; pet pendulous; bracts 6-10 pairs, 
ents 
fertile aments 1’ long, dense, with solitary flowers and densely enous fruit.— 
quent from Southern Nevada and Utah to Arizona and New Mexico; growing a 
high, and flowering in March. 
RICKELLIA (CLA ) LONGIFOLIA. — Slightly scabrous, very slender, with 
Spreading branches; leaves 2-5' long, linear, acuminate, entire or obscurely sinuate- 
toothed, ae ~~ scabrous margins, 3-nerved, punctulate; flowers on short slender 
pedicels, a ~ and in small terminal clusters; involucre glabrous, 2'' long, the 
Spreading s acutish, or the linear inner ones obtuse or iei achenium 10- 
striate, digka and minutely hairy on the angles, nearly 1'’ long, the soft minu 
barbulate pappus but little m Nevada (Wheeler); Northern Avisons 
(Mrs. E. P. Thompso n). In adamp cañ pa 
HAPLOPAPPUS CERVINUS.— Low, 6 h ase ticese, resinous‘scabrous, the short 
herbaceous stems leafy to the top; leaves chong lanes, te long, shortly cuspi- 
date, attenuate noite ne entire, subscabrous, 3- ares 34" long, in 3-5-flow- 
terminal corymbs; outer aoaea linear, acumin fe with etaceous spreading tips, 
the inner char Mien: acutish, erect, nearly equaling . 
the pappus; rays few, narrow and short; ; style exserted ; achenia linear, pubescent. i 
Nearest to H, Prunai, Gray. Antelope Cañon, Utah (Wheeler). ra 
_LAPHAMIA MEGALOCEPHALA.— Scabrous-pubescent; stems diffusely branched, 1 ` 
higħ; branches simple; leaves alternate, broadly ovate, 2-3" long, smaller the 
branches, entire, very shortly petioled; heads large, 2-3"' in diameter, terminal and 
Solitary, discoid, many-flowered; somaya ape eee pappus none.— With 
nearly the habit of L. Stansburii, Torr. Nevada (Wheeler). 
VIGUIERA RETICULATA.—White-to! acta stems ns eon: leayes subopposite, 
coriaceous and rigid, broad-ovate, 1-2’ long, cordate at base, acute, entire, shortly 
Petioled. beneath » bracts s 
ah , gly reticulated cts small, lanceolate; heads 4-5 together in 
corymbs; involucral seales imbricated in 3-4 series, lanceolate, thick, ap- 
poe ia _ spreading tips; rays entire; receptacle shortly conical; chaff acutish ; 
È SL the nan 
tain, Southeastern California (Wheeler). 
 CHÆETADELPHA * W WHEELERI, Gray MS.—Stems numerous, 1° high, flexuous; leaves 
on 
SO ADELPE A, MS. Gen f Heads about 5-flowered. Invo- 
a Dae epics ey linea Ioucrved seals in a single row 3 and several small imbricated scales 
Ligules short. Achenia linear, glabrous, p w dale gp 
, angles, slightly thickened upward, Pappus A single row of 
