THE PLANTS OF THE GRAMPIANS. 251 
tains, at 1,850. (Said to grow at Cramond Bridge, near 
Edinburgh, where the altitude must be trifling.) 
Salix arenaria. Dalnacardoch, at 1,050. Dalwhinnie, at 
1,200. (Water of Leith, near Currie, at á much lower al- 
titude.) 
Thalictrum alpinum. E ees 1,050 feet. Clova 
mountains, about 1,500. Killin mountains, about 2,000. 
(Among corn-fields, near the east coast of Ross. Sea-level 
in thé north of Sutherland. Perhaps some of the localities 
in Caernarvonshire are of trifling altitude.) 
Saxifraga oppositifolia. Near Loch Larricilhe, in Glen 
Orgill, at 950 feet. By the Garry, at Dalnacardoch, at 1,050. 
Clova, at 1,200, or 1,400. Near Killin, at 1,350. Drumochter 
Forest at 1,350. (At the sea-level, in the north-west of 
Sutherland.) 
Epilobium alsinifolium. At 800 or 850 feet, in Glen Clova, 
growing in:a spring of cold water. Drumochter Pass, at 
1,400. (At 600 feet, by a waterfall in Caernarvonshire.) 
Oxyria reniformis. Glen Clova, about 800 or 850 feet. 
Between Loch Tay and Loch Dochart; road-side between 
King House and Inveroran; between Pitmain and Dal- 
whinnie, near Etrish bridge—heights probably from 600 to 
1000 feet. (I have seen it at 1,150 feet in Caernarvonshire ; 
and Llanberris lake, on whose margins it is said to grow, must 
be considerably lower.) 
Rhodiola rosea, Fall of Foyers, according to the Flora of 
Moray. (I do not recollect to have seen it very low on the 
Grampians}; but as it grows on sea cliffs in Berwickshire, and 
ata moderate height in Cumberland, it is not exclusively an 
alpine plant.) 
Sazxifruga stellaris. 1 believe I have seen this near the 
level of the sea in Argyle or Dumbartonshire. Drumochter 
Pass, at 1,400 feet, (As low as 600 feet in Caernarvonshire.) 
Pyrola secunda. Near the sea-level, at the mouth of the 
Lossie, according to the Flora of Moray. I have observed 
it at an altitude of 1,600 or 1,800 feet, in the Pass of 
Drumochter. (In Cumberland, perhaps about 1,500 feet.) 
