Index to this volume

Jepson Field Book Transcriptions · Jepson Herbarium

Index to all books
Previous page
31_80
Columbia, 2200 [?] ft Tuolumne Co.
----------

No. 6349. Brodiaea [= Tritelia] laxa Wats. Clay flats and wooded hillsides. Umbels (3) 6 to 12 or 33-flowered.
No. 6350. Caucalis nodosa Huds. (Torilis nodosa Gaertn.)
No. 6350a. Brodiaea grandiflora Sm.
No. 6351. Sisyrinchium bellum Wats. Meadow, clay flats.
Cont.
[No. 6348. "The most beautiful shade of pink there is" -- Dr. Helen Gilkey. See p. 79.]
No. 6352. Mimulus bolanderi Gray. Flowers on older shoots mostly in pairs at the nodes. Corolla most beautiful crimson. Corolla 1 1/2 in. long. Upper lobes largest, lateral of lower lip smaller, middle of lower lip smallest, but lobes not unequal in the extreme sense, i.e. cor. is subregular at a glance. Tube of cor. very slender; throat campanulate, as long as tube. Lobes cor. spreading. Channel betw. folds of lower side of throat = white marked. Cont. p. 102.
31_81
June 2, 1915
----------

- Hereabouts at the Grant Ranch on Nigger Gulch (an old mining locality) is a forest composed of the following species:
Pinus sabiniana
Pinus ponderosa (lower limits)
Quercus douglasii (upper " )
Quercus chrysolepis
Aesculus californica (in full bloom)
Quercus lobata, in flats
An occasional Sugar Pine is seen as at Sawmill Flat. The chaparral is extensive on certain slopes.
The following herbaceous species are common:
Artemisia heterophylla
Anthemis cotula
Cont. on p. 93.
Next page


Links to specimen database
6280 6349 6350 6351 6352
ms.
Go to page number
Copyright © 2007 Regents of the University of California Credits:
ms.