392 Dr. Hooker’s Account of a 
beria and Nootka Sound. Dr. Richardson found it in North 
America, in the wooded country, from latitude 54° to 64°. 
ERICINEZÆ. 
15. Azalea procumbens. 
Inhabits Europe, from the Pyrenees and Swiss Alps to the 
North Cape, Siberia and Iceland. ‘The north-west coast of 
America (Mr. Menzies); White Mountains of New England 
(Mr. Boott) ; Arctic America (Dr. Richardson) ; Upper Sa- 
vage Island (Captain Parry). 
16. Arbutus Uva Ursi. 
Inhabits the whole of Europe; Siberia, Kamtschatka and 
Iceland. Common in America, as the pine-barrens of New 
Jersey, and in mountainous and rocky situations of Canada 
and New England, and the plains of the Mississippi. In Arc- 
tic America (Dr. Richardson). 
17. Andromeda polifolia. 
Inhabits the south of Europe, rarely. Near Rouen and La 
Campine in France. Carniola (Scopoli). More common in 
the north of Europe; plentiful in some parts of England and 
Scotland. Not seen in Iceland. The American plant de- 
scribed by Pursh appears to be a distinct species, with much 
longer and narrower leaves. 
18. Menziesia caerulea. 
A northern plant, occurring very rarely in Scotland. More 
: plentiful in Norway, Lapland, Siberia, and Kamtschatka. In 
. Greenland (Crantz). 
SCROPHU- 
