166 Psyche [Oct.-Dec. 



Etah, West Greenland, Peary Relief Expedition, 1899. 



Xysticus bimaculatus, Emerton, 1891:. Canadian Spiders in 

 Trans. Connecticut Acad. 



Xysticus deichmanni, Sorensen, 1898. Vid. Med. Nat. For., 

 Copenhagen. 



Mt. Lincoln, Colorado, U. S.. 10.000 ft. E. C. Bowditch, 1877. 



Laggan, Alberta, Canada, 6,700 to 8,500 feet. Bean, 1890. 



Eastern Greenland, 70° north. Deichmann, 1892. 



Ashford, Washington, U. S. Emerton, 1905. 



Arctic Canada, Bernard Harbor. Canadian Arctic Expedition, 

 1913 to 1916. 



This species was found by F. C. Bowditch in 1877 on the upper 

 part of Mt. Lincoln, Colorado, and it remained for a long time 

 unidentified. In 1890 the females were found by Bean near Lag- 

 gan in the Rocky Mountains of Canada, and described in 1894 

 by Emerton in a paper on Canadian spiders in the Transactions 

 of the Connecticut Academy. About the same time it was found 

 by Deichmann in Greenland and described in 1898 by Sorensen aa 

 Xysticus deichmanni in the Proceedings of the N"atural History 

 Society of Copenhagen, Denmark. The Canadian Arctic Expedi- 

 tion brought both sexes from the northern coast of Canada in 1916 

 and by comparison with these the specimens from Mt. Lincoln, 

 Colorado, were at last identified. 



Pardosa (Lycosn) hyperborea, Thorell, 1873, in Synonyms of 

 European Spiders. 



Pardosa luteola, Emerton, 1894. Canadian Spiders, Trans. 

 Connecticut Acad. 



Eastern Greenland, Th. Holm. Copenhagen Museum. 



Southern Labrador, C. W. Townseud. 



Quebec, Canada, Emerton. 



White Mountains, N. H., in bogs at 4000 feet. Emerton. 



James Bay, Canada, latitude 52i/° north, F. Johansen. 



Manitoba, Canada, west of Hudson Bay. Emerton. 



Athabasca Landing, Canada, in bog. Emerton. 



In bogs across Canada, from Greenland and Labrador to the 

 Rocky Mountains and south to the mountains of Xew England and 

 New York. 



Pardosa furcifera, Thorell, 1873. 



