30 C. H. OSTENFELD. M.-N. Kl. 
Hutchinson’s Bay. The more southern records have no special interest 
for us. 
The plants collected during the Gjéa Expedition at King Point and 
on Herschell Island do not give any complete view of the flora of these 
tracts, as I have already pointed out in the introduction. Taking together 
both places the list reaches to 119 species. 
The monocotyledons are very poorly (only 15 species) represented in 
the collection which may be taken as a collection of the more conspicuous 
flowering plants of the country. It has been much felt that the collectors 
had no botanical educalion, and more here than with regard to the col- 
lection from the poor King William Land. 
Most of the plants collected have been found in Alaska before, but 
some few newly found inhabitants of this flora also occur, among these 
I will especially mention: Ranunculus gelidus Kar. & Kır., Anemone Drum- 
mondi S. WArs., Arabis arenicola (RıcHARDS.) GEL., Douglasia arctica 
Hook. Other rare plants are e. g. Erigeron grandiflorus Hoox., Selinum 
cniditfolium Turcz., Androsaces septentrionalis L. var. Gormanni (GREENE). 
Some few species or varieties have been described by me as new, 
as I have not succeeded in identifying them with previously described 
forms. They are: Lupinus nootkatensis Don, var. Kjellmanii; Oxytropis 
Roaldi; Senecio integrifolius (L.) CLAIRV., var. Lindstroemii, and, lastly, 
Dr. DAHLSTEDT has described Taraxacum eurylepium. 
Under each species name I have quoted only the place of the original 
description, and then papers where notes of systematic value or geogra- 
phical records of interest in relation to the Mackenzie Delta flora have 
been given; further PULLEN’s list if the name occurs there. I have not felt 
it necessary to quote the other above mentioned papers throughout, but 
only if they come under the just given categories. Nor I have quoted 
Hookkr's Flora Bor. Am. or Macoun's Catalogue, as I have done with 
regard to the list from King William Land, because I think that the 
present contribution is much too incomplete and insufficient to give an 
picture of the flora of the Mackenzie Delta. 
