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Jepson Field Book Transcriptions · Jepson Herbarium

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17_36
Priest Valley, Monterey Co.
[May 11, 1907]

No. 2668. Ribes aureum var. gracillimum. Yellow fl. [flowering] currant. A thicket 4 ft. high.
No. 2669. R. quercetorum Greene = Ribes leptanthum Gray. Bush 3 ft. high.
No. 2670. Ribes californicum H&A. Prickly gooseberry, 3 ft. high.
No. 2671. Amelanchier pallida. Thicket 10 ft. high.
No. 2672. Berberis dictyota. 3 to 6 ft. h.
No. 2673. Ceanothus leucodermis Greene. Thicket. Branchlets spiny. Bark white with a bloom or yellowish when the bloom disappears, 6 to 12 ft. high. Many stemmed from the base and forming big clumps. One sheet pink-flowered! One sheet blue fl [flowered]. White flowered bushes most common.
No. 2656. Cont. [continued] from p. 28. Called Poverty Grass by Mr. Lillis.
17_37
North Fork Lewis Creek (as to my numbers) is SE. Monterey Co. (cf. p. 5, footnote). c. 2600 ft.
May 11, 1907


No. 2674. Salix hindsiana Benth. Stems erect, slender, standing thickly. Each sheet is a separate lot. Stigmas 4 in pairs.
No. 2675. Stylocline filaginea. Composite. Dry ground.
No. 2676. Trifolium albopurpureum T&G. Dry ground.
No. 2677. Phacelia douglasii Torr. Fls. [Flowers] pale blue, lighter color in throat and veined, narrowly campanulate; 5 stamens unequal. Headwaters of Lewis Creek, n. [north] fork, edge of meadow. Stems 12-20 cm. long.
No. 2678. Stylocline filaginea Gray. Composite, on "burn." N. Fork Lewis.
No. 2679. Allophyllum divaricatum. "on burn."
No. 2679a. Phacelia divaricata Gray. Edge of meadow.
No. 2680. Eunanus. Mimulus fremontii (Benth) Gray. Det: A.L.G. Fls. [Flowers] crimson, lobes scarcely unequal, folds on lower lip in throat yellow, edge of throat a deeper crimson, especially on upper side, or often with 5
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2668 2669 2670 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 2680
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