University of Alberta Museums Search

93196 - Antennaria umbrinella Rydb.

University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium Read more about this collection »

Place CollectedNorth America: United States, Montana, Granite County, Philipsburg Valley Date Collected1988-07-20

Item Details

Place CollectedNorth America: United States, Montana, Granite County, Philipsburg Valley Date Collected1988-07-20
Accession Number 93196 Scientific Name Antennaria umbrinella Rydb. View Species Details » Family Asteraceae Collected By Bayer, Randall J.; Bilodeau, Glenn; Lebedyk, Daniel View People Details » Date Collected 1988-07-20 Collector Number MT-00832 Place Collected North America: United States, Montana, Granite County, Philipsburg Valley Place Collected Details
Montana: Granite Co., Deerlodge National Forest boundary, Phillipsburg Valley, summit area of George Hill just west of Georgetown Lake along Forest Service Road 402, 2 miles north of its intersection with Forest…
Montana: Granite Co., Deerlodge National Forest boundary, Phillipsburg Valley, summit area of George Hill just west of Georgetown Lake along Forest Service Road 402, 2 miles north of its intersection with Forest Service Road 672. Open meadow and dry forest margin of Pinus contorta.
Latitude 46.2 Longitude -113.35 Max Uncertainty Estimate (km) 2.405

Citation

Page Citation for 93196 - Antennaria umbrinella Rydb.

Page Citation

"93196 - Antennaria umbrinella Rydb., University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium." University of Alberta Museums Search Site, https://search.museums.ualberta.ca/12-140561. Accessed 08 Mar. 2025.

Taxonomic Hierarchy

Kingdom Plantae Division Flowering Plants Class Eudicots Order Asterales Family Asteraceae Genus Antennaria Gaertn. Species Antennaria umbrinella Rydb.
This hierarchy is created from our museum records, it may not always accurately reflect modern taxonomies.

Taxonomic Hierarchy for University of Alberta Vascular Plant Herbarium

Disclaimer
This hierarchy is created from our museum records, it may not always accurately reflect modern taxonomies.