1910] Fernald and Wiegand,— Botanizing in Maine 139 
August, 1897, J. D. Sornborger, no. 193. NEWFOUNDLAND: 
Barred Islands, August 20, 1903, J. D. Sornborger. QUEBEC: 
springy places and wet pastures, Ste. Anne des Monts, July 12, 
13, 1881, J. A. Allen; springy bank, Bic, July 26, 1907, Fernald 
& Collins, no. 1017; brackish shores, Dartmouth River, August, 
1904, Collins, Fernald & Pease; damp mossy ground, Pointe 
Nouvelle, Hope, July 30, 1902, Williams & "Fernald: muddy 
margins of creeks, Bonaventure River, August, 1904, Collins, 
Fernald & Pease. NEw Brunswick: Shediac, J. Fouler, 1883. 
Nova Scotia: wet meadow, Northwest Arm, Halifax, June 19, 
1883, J. Macoun. Mane: in a spring rill, Little River Island, 
Cutler, July 5, 1902, Kennedy, Willams, Collins & Fernald; 
Great Cranberry Isle, July 5, 1893, E. L. Rand; South Duck I., 
July 17, 1893, J. H. Redfield. | PLATE 84 (c). 
RANUNCULUS DELPHINIFOLIUS Torr., formerly unknown east of 
the lower Penobscot, was found carpeting the bottom of a muddy pool 
in Princeton on the St. Croix River. 
RawuNcULUS Pursuit Richardson abounds in a shallow spring- 
hole in an Arbor Vitae swamp by the Meduxnekeag River in New 
Limerick, Aroostook County, Maine. This station, the first in New 
England, agrees in its obvious characteristics — a shallow pool and 
its adjacent muddy shores in an Arbor Vitae swamp — with the 
stations already known for this local species in the Gaspé Peninsula. 
Brassica ALBA (L.) Boiss. About Eastport this is the common 
mustard of roadsides, railroad banks, waste places, ete., and it was 
found extending locally along the Washington County Railroad as 
far as Ayer’s Junction in Pembroke. Nowhere else have we ever met 
it except as a casual plant of garden refuse and similar habitats. 
AMELANCHIER CANADENSIS (L.) Medic., var. TOMENTULA Sarg. 
(see Rnopona, xi. 47) occurs locally in rocky woods at Pembroke, 
Maine. It has formerly been known in Maine only from the south- 
western section. 
CRATAEGUS COLUMBIANA Howell, var. BRUNETIANA (Sarg.) Egglest. 
was frequent about Pembroke, Maine, and specimens in the herbarium 
of the New England Botanical Club also identified by Mr. Eggleston 
show it to extend southward along the coast to Brunswick (Miss 
Furbish). 
CRATAEGUS JONESAE Sarg. This is one of the most characteristic 
species of the coastal region of Maine, seen at various points from Pem- 
broke to Portland Harbor. A sheet in the herbarium of the New 
England Botanical Club, collected by Miss Furbish at Skowhegan, 
shows it to extend inland to the central portion of the state. 
