140 
RANUNCULACEAE. 
7. ANEMONE L. Anemone, Wind-flower. 
Achenes densely villous. 
Style filiform, usually deciduous; heads of fruit spherical or nearly so ; involucral 
leaves short-petioled. 
Leaves ternate; divisions broadly cuneate or flabelliform, crenate or slightly 
cleft. 1. A. parvidora. 
Leaves 2-4 times ternate; segments linear to lanceolate. 2. A. globosa. 
Styles subulate, persistent; heads of fruit cylindrical; involucral leaves long- 
petioled. 3. A. cylindrica. 
Achenes not villous. 
Flowers cymose; achenes sparingly hirsute when young, sessile; style long, 
straight. 4. A. canadensis. 
Flowers subumbellate; achenes glabrous, stipitate ; style short, curved. 
5. A. narcissidora. 
1. Anemone parviflora Michx. On exposed mountain tops from Lab. to 
Alaska, Ont. and Colo.—Alt. about 10.500 ft.—South Cottonwood Gulch, Chaf¬ 
fee Co. 
2. Anemone globosa Nutt. ( A . multidda Hook., in part; not Poir.) In 
meadows and on hillsides from S. D. to Mackenzie River and Alaska, Colo, 
and Calif.—Alt. 7000-12,000 ft.—Rist Canon; gulch east of Stove Prairie; 
Barnes’ Camp; forks of Poudre and Big South Rivers; near foot of Rabbit- 
Ear Range; near Georgetown; Campton’s ranch; Carson; Mt. Abram, 
Ouray; Placer; Ironton Park, 9 miles south of Ouray; Veta Pass; Crystal 
Park; Ruxton Park; Pagosa Springs; Central City; Tennessee Pass; Grizzly 
Creek; Mt. Harvard; Grayback mining camps; Little Veta Mountains; 
Caribou; Lake City; Empire; Eldora to Baltimore. 
3. Anemone cylindrica A. Gray. Among bushes and on hillsides from N. B. 
to B. C., N. J. and Ariz.—Alt. 4000-8000 ft.—Pennock’s; Horsetooth Moun¬ 
tain; foot-hills, Larimer Co.; Dillon Canon, Trinidad; hills west of Soldier 
Canon; Trinidad; La Veta; Wahatoya Creek; Mancos; Pagosa Springs; 
Piedra. 
4. Anemone canadensis L. (A. dichotoma L.) In river valleys and among 
bushes from Lab. to Alb., Md. and N. M.—Alt. 4000-9000 ft.—Rist Canon; 
Ft. Collins; Table Rock; Poudre Flats; Garland; Sangre de Cristo Creek; 
New Windsor. 
5. Anemone narcissiflora L. In the mountains from Alb. to Alaska and 
Colo.—Alt. 8000-13,000 ft.—Cameron Pass; Beaver Creek; near Teller, North 
Park; Tennessee Pass; mountains northeast of Boreas; Mt. Harvard; Buf¬ 
falo Pass; Alpine Tunnel; South Park; summit of North Park Range, 
Larimer Co. 
8 . PULSATILLA Adans. Pasque Flower. 
1. Pulsatilla hirsutissima (Pursh.) Britton. ( Anemone patens Nuttal- 
liana A. Gray.) On plains and hills from Ills, to Mackenzie, Alb., Tex. and 
Wash.—Alt. 4000-10,000 ft.—Cameron Pass; foot-hills, Larimer Co.; Clear 
Creek; Hermosa; Manitou; Crystal Park; about Ouray; mountains near Veta 
Pass; South Cheyenne Canon; foot-hills west of Ft. Collins; Horsetooth 
Gulch; Howe’s Gulch; Stove Prairie Hill; Poudre Canon; Dixon’s Canon; 
Ojo; Lake City; Pike’s Peak; North Boulder Peak; Eldora to Baltimore; 
Bear Creek Canon. 
