List of Vascular Plants from the Nugsuaq Peninsula. 245 
5 
the Botanical museum in Copenhagen, where Vanr’s and LANGE's 
herbaria are preserved. On Disco I have once found this species 
at Narsaq, 69° 55', and probably the record from Sarqaq therefore 
may be correct. The localities given are the northern limit of 
the species in Danish Greenland. Н. Е. WETHERILL records 
it from Inglefield Gulf in NW. Greenland (see Bull. Geogr. Club 
Philadelphia I, p. 209, and Simmons, Rep. 2. Norwegian Arctic Exp. 
in the “Fram,” 1898—1902, No. 16, 1906), but as several of Wetherill’s 
records disagree entirely with the distribution of the plants as known 
from the investigations made by NATHORST, SIMMONS, etc. I think 
it is not improbable that the labels have been accidentally confused. 
96. Draba hirta L. Very common. 
97. Draba arctica J. Vahl. Probably common. 
98. Draba Fladnizensis Wulf. Common. 
99. Draba subcapitata Simmons, 1. с. р. 87, С. Н. OSTENFELD 
Meddel. om Grønl. 43, р. 24. Aussivik, 1902 and Niagornarsuk, 
70° 22', 1909 (Porsild) (determ. С. H. OsTENFELD). New to West 
Greenland. 
When I delivered my collections from 1902 to the Botanical 
museum in Copenhagen, I had, with some hesitation, determined 
this plant as D. glacialis Adams, although the latter species, as 
defined by GELErRT (Bot. Tidsskr. 21, р. 294) was not known from 
Greenland. My material was rather scanty and without flowers. 
The plants were densely tufted, leaves narrow-lanceolate, somewhat 
keeled, middle-vein very prominent, running up to the tip, leaf- 
margins ciliate, leaves in the upper half with unbranched, upwardly 
directed hairs, especially on the lower surface, so that the leaf 
becomes pencil-like; the under half of the leaf with short forked 
hairs. Scapes densely hairy, pods nearly globose. 
D. subcapitata was defined and its synonyms cleared up by — 
Simmons in 1906, and in 1910 OsTENFELD found the species represented 
in various collections from NE. Greenland and has also kindly deter- 
mined my specimens. 
The species seems at present to be a high-arctic one, but its 
geographical area is still insufficiently known. 
100. Draba nivalis Liljebl. Common. 
101. Draba crassifolia Grah. Sarqaq (Vahl). 
102. Draba alpina L. Common. 
103. Cochlearia officinalis L. Rather common; the most com- 
mon form is var groenlandica (L.) Gel. 
104. Lesquerella arctica (Wormsk.) S. Wats. Store Dal, not 
rare (Porsild); in the sandy district common especially in its south- 
ern parts; Sarqaq (Hartz). 
