84 PROCEEDINGS OP THE ACADEMY OF [1884. 



forms should be referred, but they strike one differently from the 

 plant I have collected in the Rocky Mountains, S. dumosa. 

 Sanguisorba canadensis C. & S. Bartlett Bay, Alaska. 



SAXIFRAQACEJE. 



Heuchera glabra Willd. Harrisburg, Alaska. 



H. micrantha Dougl. Harrisburg, Alaska. 



Parnassia palustris L. Bartlett Bay, Alaska. 



Bibes bracteosam Dougl. Pyramid Harbor, Alaska, and common along the coast. 



Very striking by the stems as thick as one's finger, and very 

 stout annual shoots, enormous maple-like leaves, long leaf-stalks, 

 and racemes eight to ten inches long. The berries are called by 

 the Indians " Shaum," as I understood them. They are gathered 

 and preserved in fat for winter use. 



B. divaricatom Dougl. Port Townsend, W. T. 



B. lacustre Pois. Port Townsend, W. T. ; Harrisburg, Alaska. 



B. Hudsonianum Richard. Fort Wrangel, Alaska. 



This seems to grow onlj"^ about stumps or dead logs. I believe 

 the berries are used by Indians, as are those of B. b/'acteosum, 



B. sanguineum Pur. Departure Bay, B. C. 

 B. subvestita Hook.? 



Fruit very large — as large as the English gooseberry', which 

 even the foliage somewhat resembles. The berry is covered by 

 viscid hairs, by which even a large berry will adhere to the finger. 

 The color of the fruit is scarlet, but the flavor is insipid. The 

 shrub grows about four to five feet high. 



Saxifraga leucanthemifolia Mx. Harrisburg, Alaska. 



S. tricuspidata Retz. Chilcat Inlet, Alaska. 



Tellima grandiflora R. Br. Harrisburg, Alaska. 



Tiarella trifoliata L. Port Townsend, W. T., and northwards. 



CRASSULACEiE. 



Sednm spathnlsefoliam Hook. Victoria, B. C. 

 8. Bhodiola D. C. Bartlett Bay, Alaska. 



DROSERACEiE. 



Drosera rotundifolia L. Fort Wrangel, Alaska. 



ONAGRACE^. 



Circeea alpina L. Harrisburg, Alaska. 



Epilobium affine Bong. Fort Wrangel, Sitka, Alaska. 



E. alpiaum L. Pyramid Harbor, Killisnow Island, Alaska. 



