360 
A JOURNEY TO THE 
ry---Eye-berry---Blue-Berry,---and a fmall fpecies 
of Hips. 
Burridge---Colisfoot—Sorrel— Dandelion, | 
Wifb-a-capucca—fackafhey-puck—Mofs of va- 
rious forts—Gra/fs of feveral kinds—and Vetches. 
The Trees found fo far North near the Sea, con- 
Sift only of Pines—Funiper—Small Poplar Bufh- 
willows—-and Creeping Birch. 
EFORE I conclude this work, it may not be 
improper to give a fhort account of the 
principal Animals that frequent the high Nor- 
thern latitudes, though moft of them arefound alfo 
far to the Southward, and confequently in much 
milder climates: The buffalo, mufk-ox, deer, 
and the moofe, have been already defcribed in 
this Journal. I fhall therefore only make a few | 
remarks on the latter, in order to rectify a mif- 
take, which, from-wrong information, has crept 
into Mr. Pennant’s Aratic Zoology. In page 2t 
of that elegant work, he claffes the Moofe with 
the We-was-kifh, though it certainly has not any 
affinity to it. 
The We-was-kifh, or as fome (though impro- 
perly) call it, the Wafkefle, is quite a different ani- 
mal from the moofe, being by no means fo large | 
in fize. The horns of the We-was-kifh are fome- 
thing fimilar to thofe of the common deer, but 
are not palmated in any part. They ftand more 
upright, have fewer branches, and want the brow- _ 
antler. The head of this animal is fo far from | 
being | 
