1826, JUNE. PLANTS COLLECTED 193 



yellow ; calyx thickly covered with rigid hairs ; this extremely handsome 

 plant, certainly the finest of the genus (not even excepting L. nootkatensis) , 

 is found on the mountainous grounds covering the whole face of the 

 country, and at the distance of a few miles appears much like Spartium 

 scoparium 1 on the wild and beautiful heaths of England ; 18 inches to 2J 

 feet high ; often producing a spike of perfect blossoms a foot to 15 inches, 

 as the specimens in the collection will show ; I beg the former name will 

 be adopted after Mr. Turner. 



(153) Cerastium sp. ; perennial ; leaves opposite, ovate-lanceolate, 

 entire, smooth ; stem spreading ; flowers white ; plentiful on the 

 mountains, in shady places. 



(154) Salix sp. (male) ; a low shrub; on the hills ; rare; I regret the 

 female of this species could not be found. 



(155) Pedicularis sp. ; annual ; flowers white ; a low plant ; on moist 

 ground on the summit of the hills. 



(156) Hexandria, Monogynia, perennial ; calyx three-leaved, acute ; 

 corolla three petals, obtuse, the inside covered with strong purple and 

 white hairs ; stigma trifid ; capsule angular, immature ; flowers white ; 

 stem low ; seldom more than one leaf sheathing, linear-lanceolate ; a 

 small bulbous plant, A to 8 inches high ; plentiful on the highest peaks 

 of the mountains, flowering delightfully among the snow. 



(157) Mitella, perennial ; will probably prove diphylla ; in the close 

 shady pine- woods, in rich decayed vegetable soils. 



(158) Cerastium sp. ; perennial; leaves opposite, sessile, linear, or 

 subulate, slightly pubescent ; flowers white ; probably C. alpinum ; on 

 rocks on the hills, in small tufts. 



(159) Fumaria sp. ; perennial ; root bulbous or granulous ; flowers 

 white ; leaves glaucous ; a low delicate plant ; on high ground, growing 

 out of the crevices of rocks and near decayed wood ; plentiful. 



(160) Draba sp. ; perennial (?), biennial (?) ; leaves orbicular, ovate, 

 cauline, alternate, amplexicaul, glaucous ; flowers white ; a low spreading 

 plant, frequenting springs and moist rocks; on the summit of the 

 mountains ; abundant. 



(161) Viola sp. ; perennial ; leaves orbicular, smooth, nearly entire ; 

 flowers small, bright yellow ; abundant in all the upland and mountain 

 woods. 



(162) Saxifraga sp. ; perennial ; leaves orbicular, dentate, glaucous ; 

 flowers white ; 10 to 15 inches high ; on moist rocks, flowering among the 

 snow. 



(163) Valeriana (?), perennial; leaves opposite, pinnate; flowers 

 appear to be purple ; not quite in flower ; rare. 



(164) Pentstemon sp. ; perennial ; corolla nearly equally five-cleft, 

 striated with dark purple veins ; sterile filament thickly covered with 

 white hairs ; leaves lanceolate, dentate, serrulate, upper ones nearly 

 entire, smooth ; flowers purple-rose ; a small but very fine plant ; abundant 

 on the channels of mountain rivulets and rocky situations ; does not seem 

 to have been observed by Nuttall or Pursh. 



1 Gytisus scoparius, Hook. f. Student's Fl. Brit. Isl., ed. 3, p. 92. 



