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19th century
Clark

MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Garry Oak
Alt. Title:  
Quercus garryana  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:03/26/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

The Lewis sheets consist of a single leaf each gathered along the lower Columbia River between Puget's Island and the Cowlitz River on 26 Mar 1806. Both explorers mention the species on numerous occasions (Moulton, 1988, 1990). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:03/26/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 186



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Garry Oak
Alt. Title:  
Quercus garryana  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:03/26/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Gathered along the lower Columbia River between Puget's Island and the Cowlitz River on 26 Mar 1806. Both explorers mention the species on numerous occasions (Moulton, 1988, 1990). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:03/26/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 187



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Fragrant Sumac
Alt. Title:  
Rhus trilobata  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:10/01/1804
Dates:
1804
Abstract:  

Meehan (1898: 21) lists this specimen, Lewis 57, as Rhus canadensis Marsh. var. trilobata (Nutt.) A. Gray ex J. M. Coult. (in Contr. U.S. Natl. Herb. 2: 68. 1891). Moulton (1987a: 470) gives the location as near the mouth of the Cheyenne River, Stanley Co., South Dakota. The specimen was gathered on 1 Oct 1804. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:10/01/1804
Call #:  
PH-LC 190



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Golden Currant
Alt. Title:  
Ribes aureum  
Creator:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark
Dates:
July 1805, April 1806
Abstract:  

Lewis reports on 16 Apr 1806 he "preserved . . . a currant which is now in blume and has yellow blossom something like the yellow currant of the Missouri but a different species" (Moulton, 1991: 126). The expedition was at The Dalles along the Columbia River. Specimens of the collection are preserved at K and PH. The Kew sheet is annotated "Ribes flavum / Narrows of Columbia / Aprl. 16th 1806" while the right-hand specimen on the Academy sheet is annotated "Yellow Flowering Currant. / -- / Near the narrows of / Columbia R. / -- / Aprl. 16th 1806." The right-hand specimen on the K sheet is in good flower while the 16 Apr 1806 specimen on PH-LC 191 has only a few flowers remaining in a packet. Lewis originally gathered Ribes aureum on 29 Jul 1805 at Three Forks in Gallatin Co., Montana, according to the label data: "Yellow Currant of the / Missouri. / Jul. 29th 1805." At present, the specimen (PH-191, left-hand specimen) consists only of a twig and fragments of the leaves. [footnote 8] Based on the glabrous leaves, the collection is the western var. aureum rather than the eastern var. villosum Berland. (in Mém. Soc. Phys. Hist. Genève 3(2): 60. 1826). Nonetheless, on 2 Aug 1805, Lewis reports: "we found a great courants, two kinds of which were red, others yellow deep purple and black, also goosburies and service buries now ripe and in full perfection, we feasted suptuously on our wild fruit particularly the yellow courant and the deep purple servicebury which I found to be excellent" (Moulton, 1988, 30-31, 35). The expedition was along the Jefferson River in Madison Co., Montana. Both locations are within the known distribution of Ribes aureum var. aureum. [footnote 8:] On 8 Jul 1806, Clark recovered a cache buried on 20 Aug 1805 by Lewis (see Moulton, 1988: 125-126). Clark reports, "I found every article Safe, except a little damp" (Moulton, 1933: 172). Moulton (p. 173) suggests that "only one plant specimen (golden currant) remains of those which were cached" at Camp Fortunate (located just below the forks of the Beaverhead River and Horse Prairie Creek in Beaverhead Co., Montana). The item in question is the 29 Jul 1805 collection (PH-LC 192, left-hand specimen). Lewis constantly compares two yellow-flowered currants, referring to them as the Columbia and as the Missouri yellow currant. Lewis was already familiar with buffalo currant, Ribes aureum var. villosum (including R. odoratum Wendl. in Bartl. & Wendl., Beitr. Bot. 2: 15. Dec 1825), having seen the taxon while ascending the Missouri River during the spring of 1805. On 30 Apr 1805, according to Lewis, Sacagawea "found & brought me a bush Something like the Current, which She Said bore a delicious froot and that great quantites grew on the Rocky Mountains, this Srub was in bloom has a yellow flower with a deep Cup, the froot when ripe is yellow and hangs in bunches like Cheries, Some of those berries yet remained on the bushes" (Moulton, 1987b: 89). Most assuredly Lewis preserved a specimen subsequently lost in the White Bear Island cache (see Hordeum jubatum, No 89 above). It was likely that this introduction is the basis for his assuming all yellow-flowered currants east of the Continental Divide (including R. americanum Mill., Gard. Dict., ed. 8: unpaged [Ribes no. 4]. 1768) represent a single species (i.e., the Missouri yellow currant); see Moulton (1987b: 91). Lewis reports "the yellow Currants beginning to ripen" on 12 Jul 1806 when he was near present-day Great Falls in Cascade Co., Montana, (Moulton, 1993: 107). This probably refers to the more western var. aureum. On 9 Aug 1806, Clark reports receiving a "deep purple berry of the large Cherry of the Current Speces" which Moulton (1993: 286) takes as a reference to "the golden currant" (p. 287, i.e. Ribes aureum). The plants would have been in good fruit at this time of the year. Clark's party was along the Missouri River in what are now McKenzie and Williams cos., North Dakota, well within the present-day distribution of var. villosum. There is no indication that seeds or specimens were collected. Pursh gives the location for Ribes aureum as "On the banks of the river Missouri and Columbia," and indicates he saw garden material. The Missouri River reference appears to be documented by sterile material on the Lambert sheet at Kew (two left-hand specimens -K, Moulton 149b). As may be seen below (No. 166), the Missouri reference and certainly the sterile stems, now appear to represent R. aureum var. villosum (R. odoratum) and not the var. aureum as suggested by Moulton (1991: 129). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark
Call #:  
PH-LC 191



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Straggly Gooseberry
Alt. Title:  
Ribes divaricatum  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:04/08/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Robinson and Greenman questionably identify this sheet as Ribes menziesii Pursh (1813: 732.), and Meehan (1898: 27) and Cutright (1969: 417) duly report the sheet under this name. The fragmentary specimen was collected on 8 Apr 1806. There is a degree of uncertainty where the party camped on 7-8 Apr (Moulton, 1991: 89). They were near Beacon Rock in Skamania Co., Washington, and Clark took a group across the Columbia River into Multnomah Co., Oregon. No mention is made of this plant in the journal of either explorer. Moulton (1991: 15) indicates that Lewis probably saw R. divaricatum on 25 Mar. The species is rather common along the lower Columbia River. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:04/08/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 192



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Red Currant
Alt. Title:  
Ribes sanguineum  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:03/27/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

The type was collected along the Columbia River on 27 Mar 1806 (Moulton, 1991: 45, 47). That day the expedition stopped near Rainier and near Globe, both in Columbia Co., Oregon. The specimens could have come from either location (Moulton, 1991: 19-22). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:03/27/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 193



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Sticky Currant
Alt. Title:  
Ribes viscosissimum  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:06/16/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

The type was collected on the Lolo Trail in Idaho Co., Idaho, on 16 Jun 1806. The expedition traveled from Eldorado Creek to Fish Creek (Moulton, 1993: 27-31). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:06/16/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 194



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Prairie Wild Rose
Alt. Title:  
Rosa arkansana  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:10/18/1804
Dates:
1804
Abstract:  

The specimen, Lewis 50, is reported as Rosa woodsii Lindl. (Ros. Monogr.: 21. 1820) by Meehan (1898: 26) and by Cutright (1969: 418). The specimen was collected near the mouth of the Cannon Ball River, Sioux Co., North Dakota, on 18 Oct 1804 (Moulton, 1987a: 471). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:10/18/1804
Call #:  
PH-LC 195



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Thimbleberry
Alt. Title:  
Rubus parviflorus  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:04/15/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Meehan (1898: 26) reports this as Rubus nutkanus Moç. ex Ser. in DC. (Prodr. 2: 566. 1825) var. velutinus (Hook. & Arn.) Brewer (Bot. Calif. 1: 172. 1876), a related plant restricted to coastal California and now known as R. parviflorus var. velutinus (Hook. & Arn.) Greene (in Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 17: 14. 1890). The specimen was gathered on 15 Apr 1806 at The Dalles in Wasco Co., Oregon. A note on the label indicates this is a "shrub of which the natives eat the yung sprout without kooking." On 8 Apr, apparently near the Cascades of the Columbia in Hood River Co., Oregon (Moulton, 1991: 89), Lewis encountered both this species and the next (see No. 172; Moulton, 1991: 96), and worked out the technical differences between them (p. 94). It is possible the specimens of R. parviflorus and R. spectabilis were collected at this time rather than on 15 Apr as noted on the labels. The plants occur in both locations. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:04/15/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 196



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Salmonberry
Alt. Title:  
Rubus spectabilis  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:03/27/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Pursh provides a full description in Latin. Ewan (1979: 97) excludes the Lewis and Clark collection, considering the two sheets at BM as the type. We hereby designate the Menzies sheet as the lectotype. The figure published by Pursh in 1813 is based on a portion of the Merck paratype. The Lewis and Clark paratype was collected at The Dalles in Wasco Co., Oregon, on 15 Apr 1806, according to the label data, but Lewis describes the plant on 8 Apr (see the discussion under Rubus parviflorus, No. 171 above). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:03/27/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 197



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Lance-Leaved Sage
Alt. Title:  
Salvia reflexa  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:09/21/1804
Dates:
1804
Abstract:  

Pursh provides a full description of his new species. Meehan (1898: 39) lists only PH-LC 198, apparently unaware of PH-LC 199 from Lambert. He refers the specimen to Salvia lanceolata Willd. (Enum. Pl.: 37. 1809), a later name for S. reflexa. The Lewis type was collected at the Big Bend of the Missouri River in Lyman Co., South Dakota, on 21 Sep 1804 (Moulton, 1987a: 96-99). Epling (in Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 60: 103. 1939) did not differentiate among the syntypes when he indicated the type was at PH. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:09/21/1804
Call #:  
PH-LC 198



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Greasewood
Alt. Title:  
Sarcobatus vermiculatus  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:07/20/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Lewis collected the species while traveling separately from Clark on 20 Jul 1806. Most likely he found the plant in the river bottom along the Marias River in Toole Co., Montana (Moulton, 1993: 118-120). The plant was first seen by Lewis on 11 May 1805 at which time he provides a detailed description and gives it a common name, "fleshey leafed thorn" (Moulton, 1987b: 142). If he collected specimens at this time they were lost in the White Bear Island cache (see Hordeum jubatum, No. 89 above). Behnke (1997) reviews the history of the early collections, and the events surrounding the naming of the species. He establishes a new family for this genus, Sarcobataceae Behnke (Taxon 46: 503. 1997), making this the second new family of western North American plants found initially by Lewis and Clark, the other being Calochortaceae Dumort (Anal. Fam. Pl.: 53. 1829). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:07/20/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 200



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Narrow-Leafed Scullcap
Alt. Title:  
Scutellaria angustifolia  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:06/05/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

The type was collected near Kamiah in Idaho Co., Idaho, on 5 Jun 1806. Pursh lists this as "On the river Kooskoosky . . . June." Lewis refers to a "horsemint" in his journal of this date (Moulton, 1991: 335), but this probably refers to a different species. That common name typically applies to the genus Monarda, which Lewis would know from Virginia. Inasmuch as M. fistulosa L. var. menthaefolia (Grah.) Fernald (in Rhodora 46: 495. 1944) occurs in the area, and differs only slightly from the eastern variety, it is not likely Lewis would make a specimen of it or confuse it with skullcap, Scutellaria angustifolia. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:06/05/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 201



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Spearleaf Stonecrop
Alt. Title:  
Sedum lanceolatum  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:06/05/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Same sheet as PH-LC 202b. The specimen was collected near Kamiah in Idaho Co., Idaho, on 5 Jun 1806. Lewis mentions several plants in his journal on this day, but not this species (Moulton, 1991: 335). Given the fine technical details that distinguish this species from the next (No. 177 below), it is not surprising that Pursh did not recognize he had a second new species of Sedum. It is equally understandable why others, save a monographer, failed to note the differences as well (e.g., Meehan, 1898: 28; Cutright, 1969: 419; Moulton, in press). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:06/05/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 202a



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Wormleaf Stonecrop
Alt. Title:  
Sedum stenopetalum  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:07/02/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Same sheet as PH-LC 202a. Pursh based his description of Sedum stenopetalum upon a mixed collection of this species and S. lanceolatum (see No. 176 above), citing simultaneously both locations as "On rocks on the banks of Clarck's river and Kooskoosky." Clausen's lectotypification was made specifically to maintain the long-established applications of both names. The lectotype was collected in the vicinity of Travelers' Rest in Missoula Co., Montana. The actual date was probably 2 Jul instead of the date (1 Jul) on the label as Lewis "found serveral other uncommon plants specemines of which I preserved" (Moulton, 1993: 79) on that day. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:07/02/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 202b



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Rigid Goldenrod
Alt. Title:  
Solidago rigida  
Creator:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark
Dates:
1804-06
Abstract:  

Pursh's hand-written label indicates the specimen was collected on the "High dry prairies" on "Septb: 12. 1804." According to Moulton (1987a: 67-68), on 12 Sep 1804 the expedition was along the Missouri River of Charles Mix and Brule cos., South Dakota. Cutright (1969: 88) interprets the date on the specimen as 13 Sep. Moulton (in press) suggests this specimen was collected in 1806 and that Pursh mistakenly wrote 1804. The rationale for this is that the sheet is not accounted for in Lewis's list of plants gathered that year (Moulton, 1987a: 450-472). On 12 Sep 1806, the expedition was rapidly moving down the Missouri River. Their morning camp was mostly likely in Andrew Co., Missouri; their evening camp was at St. Michael's Prairie in Buchanan Co., Missouri (Moulton, 1993: 355-356). Liatris aspera was collected on 12 Sep 1804 (see No. 101 above), but was duly recorded in Lewis's list. The species is a common member of the Great Plains flora and the var. humilis is known to occur in Charles Mix and Brule cos., South Dakota (Great Plains Flora Association, 1977). Steyermark (Fl. Missouri: 1496, 1497. 1963), however, does not report the species from either Andrew or Buchanan cos. although it is found nearby. The var. humilis does occur in Missouri (Heard & Semple, 1988), albeit rarely, and then not along the Missouri River. The correct name of the taxon is probably Oligoneuron rigidum var. humilis (Porter) G. L. Nesom (in Phytologia 75: 27. 1993). Nesom (1993) defines Oligoneuron as a genus of six species. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark
Call #:  
PH-LC 205



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Mountain Ash
Alt. Title:  
Sorbus scopulina  
Creator:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark
Dates:
1805-06
Abstract:  

According to Meehan (1898: 24), Robinson and Greenman questionably identify the collection as Pyrus sambucifolia Cham. & D.F.K. Schltdl. (in Linnaea 2: 36. 1827). Given that the specimen represented a species yet to be described, this is reasonable. Cutright (1969: 416) suggests the specimen might be Sorbus sitchensis M. Roem. (Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 3: 139. 1847). There are two labels on the sheet. The uppermost is an original Lewis label: "No. 24. found the 2th day of Septr. 1805. / a small growth only rising to the / hight of 15. feet moist situations / it seems to prefer. it is a handsome growth." The second label is one prepared by Pursh: "On the tops of the highest / peaks & mountains. / Jun. 27th 1806. / In the Rocky mountains." On 2 Sep 1805, Lewis was in Lemhi Co., Idaho, traveling along the North Fork of the Salmon River from near the mouth of Hull Creek to near the junction of Hammerean Creek (Moulton, 1988: 183-185). On 27 Jun 1806, the expedition was near Hungery Creek along the Lolo Trail in Idaho Co., Idaho (Moulton, 1993: 55-59). It is possible there are two collections here, with the three fragments on the left probably the 2 Sep specimens and the two fragments on the right perhaps gathered on 27 Jun. The lateness of the inflorescences, however, makes it more likely all the fragments were gathered on 2 Sep. The nature of this sheet is similar in many ways to PH-LC 135, a specimen of Lonicera utahensis (see No. 112 above). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark
Call #:  
PH-LC 206



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Red False Mallow
Alt. Title:  
Sphaeralcea coccinea  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:07/20/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Pursh proposed a new combination for Malva coccinea. It was long felt this was the first place of publication for the name until it was shown that the names in Fraser's Catalogue were validly published (Reveal, 1968) a few months before Pursh's book appeared in print. As a result the typification of the name on Lewis and Clark material proposed by Cutright (1969: 407) is inappropriate. On 20 Jul 1806 Lewis was along the Marias River in Toole Co., Montana, and reports several species of plants were "in full blume" (Moulton, 1993: 119). On the same day, Clark was camped along the Yellowstone River north of the mouth of Clarks Fork (Moulton, 1993: 208-209). While either explorer could have found the species, most likely this is a Lewis collection. Pursh provides a full description in Latin and indicates he saw Lewis material as well as garden specimens. Specimens on the Lambert sheet (PH-LC 208) are at odds with the specimens on the sheet retained by the American Philosophical Society. We suspect the majority (if not all) of fragments on the Lambert sheet represent garden specimens grown from seeds obtained by Nuttall on the upper Missouri in 1811. None of the fragments truly match the fragments on PH-LC 207 in terms of age and condition. In this instance, it is probably that the original Lewis and Clark fragments were discarded in favor of the flowering, garden specimens. As a result, we conclude PH-LC 208 is not an authentic Lewis and Clark collection. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:07/20/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 207



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Oregon Moss
Alt. Title:  
Stokesiella oregana  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:01/20/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Crum and Anderson (1981) refer to the species as Stokesiella praelonga (Hedw.) Robins. Robinson (1967) and Ireland et al. (1980) recognized this as S. oregana, but Anderson et al. (1990) retained this species in its original genus described by Jaeger: Eurhynchium oreganum (Sull.) Jaeg. (Ber. S. Gall. Naturw. Ges. 1876-77: 361. 1878. Ad.2: 247). Many workers follow the more conservative taxonomy of Crum et al. (1990). This specimen was collected at Fort Clatsop, Clatsop Co., Oregon, on 20 Jan 1806. (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:01/20/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 108



MUSEUM OBJECT

Title:
Mountain Kittentails
Alt. Title:  
Synthyris missurica  
Creators:
Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark | Collection date:06/26/1806
Dates:
1806
Abstract:  

Synthyris missurica (Raf.) Pennell in Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 85: 89. 1933, based on Veronica missurica Raf. in Amer. Monthly Mag. & Crit. Rev. 3: 175. 1818, a new name for Veronica reniformis Pursh, Fl. Amer. Sept.: 10. Dec (sero) 1813 (non Raf., 1808). - Lectotype: PH-LC 211 (Moulton 166b), designated by Pennell (in Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 85: 89. 1933). Duplicate of the lectotype: PH-LC 210 (Moulton 166a). Pursh provides a full description of the species in Latin. The type was collected on 26 Jun 1806 when the expedition was along Hungery Creek below Willow Ridge in Idaho Co., Idaho (Moulton, 1993: 52-55). (The Lewis & Clark Herbarium Digital Imagery Study Set, ANSP, 2002) On deposit at the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Collected by:Meriwether Lewis & William Clark Collection date:06/26/1806
Call #:  
PH-LC 210



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