134 TWELFTH ANNUAL REPORT. 



and Ramsey counties, KeJley; Hennepin county, Simmons; Goodliue county, Sandberg; 

 southeastern Winona county, WiiichcU; Dodge county, Harrington; Blue Earth county, 

 Leiberg; bluffs of the Cottonwood river, Juni. 



J. commimiSjL., var. alpiiia, Gaud. Juniper. 



North shore of lake Superior, Juni; Taylor's Falls, Miss Cathcart. North. 



J. Virginiana, L. Red Cedar. Red Savin. 



Rainy Lake river, Daivson; upper Mississippi (rare), Nicollet, Garrison; lake Pepin, 

 Miss Manning; bluffs of the Cottonwood river, Jjtni; at Redwood Falls, perhaps fur- 

 nishino; the name of the Redwood river. (Also see Cornus stolonifera.) Found scantily 

 in exposed situations, as on the bluffs or shores of rivers and lakes, growing to be 10 to 

 25 feet high, in the greater part of the state ; most frequent in its southeast quarter ; 

 absent, or rare, near its west side and north of lake Superior. 



J. Sabina, L., var. procuinbens, Pursh. Savin. Juniper. 



Lake of the Wood.'», Dawson; plentiful on dunes at Sand Hill river, Gartield, Polk 

 county, Upham; near Itasca lake. Garrison; Rice county, Spcrry; bluffs of Le Sueur 

 river, Leiherg; Olmsted county (rare), Harrington; the Big Woods, and Fill more, Winona 

 and Houston counties (rare), WincheU. North. 



TAXACE^. Yew Family. 



TAXUS, Tourn. Yew. 



T . Canadensis, Willd. (T. baccata, L., var. Canadensis, Gray.) American 

 Yew. Ground Hemlock. 

 Abundant north of lake Superior, Juni, Roberts; common, or frequent, thence west 

 and south to nearly the same limits as the pines, black spruce and balsam fir; near 

 Lake City, M7s. Ray. 



ARACE.E. Arum Family. 



ARIS^-EMA, Martius. Indian TujtNip. Dragon-Arum. 



A. triphylluni, Torr. (A. atroiubens, Blume. Bof. Gazette, ix, 114.) Indian 

 Turnip. Jack-m-the-Pulpit. 

 Common, or frequent, throughout the state. 



A. Dracoiitiuni, Schott. Green Dragon. Dragon-root. 

 Lake Pepin, Miss Manning. Rare. Southeast. 



CALL A, L. Water Arum. Calla. 



C. paUistris, L. Water Arum. Wild Calla. 



Common in the north half of the state, and southeast to Minneapolis and Saint 

 Paul; rare farther southeast, as near lake Pepin, Miss Manning; absent southwest- 

 ward . , 



SYMPLOCARPUS, Salisb. Skunk Cabbage. 



S. toetidus, Salisb. Skunk Cabbage. 



Chisago county, etc. (common), Upliam] Still watei-, Jfi^s Field; Saint Paul, Kelley; 

 near Minnehaha falls, Roberts; lake Pepin, Miss Manning; Winona county, Holzinger; 

 New Ulm. Juni. [Hesper, Iowa, Mrs. Carter; lake Superior, Whitney.] 



