300 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CANADA. 



29. NYMPH/EA. 



(3066.) N. tetragona, Georgi, Reiseim.Enss. Eeichs, I., 220. (1775.) 



Caslalia tetragona, Lawson, Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., VI., sec. iv., 112. 



C. pygmxa, Salisb. Parad. Lond. t., 68. 



Xymphxa pygmsea. Ait. Hort. Kew., ed. 2., III., 293. 



Dr. Britten of Columbia College, New York, after a careful examina- 

 tion of all available specimens has satisfied himtielf that this species 

 is quite distinct from i\\ odoroia var. minor, Sims. He says : — " The 

 plant may at once be distinguished from the eastern N. odorota var. 

 minor, by the oblong leaves, sometimes nearly twice as long as broad, 

 with narrow, acutish lobes, and the flower.s still smaller with 7 to 8 

 rayed stigma." Misinaibi Eiver, Northern Ontario, 1879. (R. Bell.) 

 In ponds along the Severn River, Keewatin, 1886. (J. M. Macoun.) 



(93.) N. reniformis, DC; Gray, Man., Ed. VI., 56. (1890.) 



References under N. tuberosa, Paine ; Gray, Man., ed. V., 56 (1867) ; 

 Macoun, Cat., I., 31, belong here. 



30. NUPHAR, Smith. 



(9*1.) Nuphar ad vena, Ait. f. var minus, Morong. 



References under JV. luteum, Smith, var. (?) Part I., 23, 



belong here. 



766. STYLOPHORUM, Nutt. 



(3067.) S. diphyllum, Nutt. (Celandine Poppy.) 



Damp woods, from Plover Mills to Thorndale, Middlesex Co., Ont., 

 15th Ma}-, 1887. (B. Elliott.) Near London, Ont. (Dearness.) 



40. NASTURTIUM. 



(115.) N. palustre, DC. Var. 



Our specimens placed here agree exactly with Suksdorff's plant col- 

 lected May 4th, 1885, and distributed with the above name. The long 

 pods, over half an inch long, with stiff branching stem and deep fusi- 

 form root distinguish it from all other forms of -iV. palustre in our pos- 

 session. Our specimens aie from Port Haney, and Agassiz in the lower 



