$ BOTANICAL OBSERVATIONS IN WESTERN WYOMING. ~ 213, 
ery fine specimens of the above, Dr. Parry has also collected T. spath ulita A =T Prai 
g Os 34 142 and 1 15), and a single plant of a very different species which he pro- 
— to eall = TEA eres 
ae ATA a number.’ See p. 106). — It has a proper caudex two inches MB Fe) 
marked w ane s of former leaves, and at the top bears a dense mass of 
a oni. Walle haley leaves, and, buried among them, a single wishes: ae 
of rous very 
but scantier. le rays are pale pink, and about eight lines long, and the disk-flore ` 
exceedingly numerous. Not having seen a specimen of Nuttall’s T. incana, I have y 
some doubt as to whether this may not be his plant of that name. If not, it may prop- 
erly bear the name serge Dr. stro has proposed. It grew on a high peak in north- 
western ee oming.— D. C. EATON. 
fares PPUS (S ) MU TICA ULIS.—Stenotus parane Nutt., Torr. and 
Gra; Wiha River.—An n interesting redise covery of th + species, w. wate h seems 
to be truly distinct asa A. a GRAY 
HKUHRIA INTEGRIFOLL iia tary puberaent becoming glabrate; ‘itor ; 
Ss seep stems a “sg high fro caudex, leafy only at base, hearing 
a. 
A p p 3 
to four OT uve lo ose »ova 
, 
sometimes abiha entire, lightly 3-nerved, pi A narrowed into a slende peti- 
pops 1 fin 
by the excurrence of the stout ut midrib or eae in the peer print ers 
ridges. 
are arinena ifolia) was collected 
Fs Prof. Newberry in sean Sioana several years ago, at “San Juan” pres 
in Utah 1 or New Mexico); and Dr- Parry has now ound it much farther north. The _ . 
hed revision which I have recently _ 
made of the genus, as now e xtended accor rding tothe views of Bentham in the Genera ` * 
ram, it is made to include Achyropappus (of which section we have S. 
_ Neo-Mezicana, 8. Bigelowii, S. Woodhousei, S. pedata, "s $. Maa all but the first 
published by-me under Bahia or Achyropappus; and now the present species adds a Y 
latyschkuhria, with praa Aap patna ila and habit, but 
rs of Achyropappus.— A. G: 
PARRYI.— About a foot saa E and glandular; stem simple, 
d above, bearing (excepting bracts) only one ot two pairs of cauline leaves an 
1 heads; radi cal and lowest cauline leaves ovate or ovatę-lanceolate 
EE E E. f 
1} 3 sy + it let, 1 4 3 PRERE 
acu 
involucre somewhat — rays ei akenes almost glabrous: “pappus jonsei 
 barbellate in the manner of 4. mollis.— olia, var. discoidea lat a 
in Sill. Jour. 33, p. 238. e tose enhanc Gray in Proc. Acad. pence a ta 
P. 68. Mountains of Colorado (Parry, Taa nd Harbour, Greene), ee now found a 
by Dr. Te in Wyoming. eat Mr. Nevius sends a specimen from the mountains in a 
Oregon, Sied on one hand t 4A. mollis, on the other to broad leaved f Pona of A. oe 
alpina. S ie: i th i f which are hard to 
3 
2 
Sn Tine Sige artis e L- 
tid. Chamissonis Tor and Gray, in part.. This isa 
which abounds f the Rocky Mountains to . 
Our North species thro out ellow anthers and more | 
1 ETI ao ee og to pecs and the othet Aleutian 
1 ; ‘which | haye blackish anthers. were by Harrington an 
nalaschkensis has the tube o: 
bmg under the command of the latter; and a they seem to be disney 
is js 8 d to b 
