374 Dr. Hooxer’s Account of a 
Mr. Brown further considers the A. plantaginifolia and A. ful- 
gens to be varieties. 
Mr. Scoresby’s Greenland specimen exactly agrees with 
this, and with what I have also seen from Melville Island. 
16. ERIGERON. 
33. E. uniflorum. 
I am quite unable to distinguish this from the alpinum of 
authors. Both may be considered as inhabiting the southern 
alps, as those of Switzerland, Pyrenees, the Jura, Carniola, 
Dalmatia and Saltzberg ; and more frequently still those of 
the north of Europe. In Scotland it occurs on a few of the 
highest mountains. In Lapland it appears common, as it is 
also on the low grounds in Iceland. Colmaster discovered it 
in Labrador. Ihave a specimen gathered by Mr. Goldie on a 
river bank near Quebec. Shores of the Arctic Sea ( Richard- 
son). It does not appear in the Arctic Flora of Captain Ross's 
or Captain Parry's first Voyages. But it was discovered by the 
latter commander in Repulse Bay. 
34. E. compositum, subacaule, foliis radicalibus longe petiolatis 
triplicato-tripartitis, laciniis linearibus divaricatis, cauli- 
nis linearibus plerumque indivisis, caule superne nudo 
unifloro. 
"TA XH 
E. compositum. Pursh Fl. of N. Amer. v. ii. p. 535. 
Cineraria Lewisii. Rich. in Franklin's Journ. App. p. 148. 
Radix ut videtur parva, perennis, pauce fibrosa. Caulis nul- 
lus. Folia radicalia, longe petiolata, profunde tripartita, 
laciniis cuneiformibus trifidis, segmentis subovatis obtusis, 
pilis brevibus obsita. Petioli lineares ciliati, basi dilatati 
subvaginati. Scapi tri-quinque pollicares pilosiusculi, 
teres, nudi, vel foliolo solitario lanceolato integro in- 
structi. 
