$4 THE FLORA OF NEWFOUNDLAND, LABRADOR 
Plants,” mostly the collections of the Moravian missionaries in 
Northern Labrador. 
3. Dr. Robinson, Professor of Harvard University, with 
Mr. Schrenk, spent a month or so in Newfoundland last summer, 
and their researches have added considerably to our knowledge of 
the flora of this country. Dr. Robinson has generously presented 
to us a collection of these plants, and this collection affords, of 
course, valuable aid in the compilation of this list. 
4. The Revd. R. Temple, Rural Dean of Notre Dame Bay, 
kindly handed over to the compiler a few plants collected by him 
some years ago, which have added a few names to our list. But 
for the most part Mr. Temple’s plants give no data as to whether 
they were collected at Ferryland, on the South, or at White Bay, 
on the North-eastern coast. 
Dr. D. C. Eaton, of Yale, and Professor J. Fowler, of Queen’s 
University, Kingston, have kindly named most of the collections 
of 1894, as far as they are included in this paper. 
The writer’s introduction to the previous paper probably 
conveys whatever else need be stated by way of preface. 
(Ranunculacee, &e., to Leguminosee, Supplementary to Part L.). 
I.— RANUNCULACEX. Crowfoot or Buttercup Family. 
3. Actea spicata, Linn. var. rubra. Ait. Lab: L’anse 
au Clair and L’anse au Mort. (A.C. W.—Fowler). Low woods. 
August. 
1. Anemone parviflora, Michx. Ferryland or White 
Bay (Revd. R. Temple—Fowler). 
7. Ranunculus abortivus, Linn. Lab: L’anse au Clair 
and Blane Sablon. Wet places. (A.C. W.—Fowler and Coville.) 
July. 
12. R. Flammula, Linn. Freshwater Road, St. John’s 
(Prof. Holloway, Fletcher). Wet places. July. 
Var: intermedius, Hook. Quidi Vidi Lake, St. John’s 
(Robinson and Schrenk). Muddy shores. August. 
