314 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CANADA. 



There are two forms of this species in British Columbia. One of a 

 slender habit, with tive-lobed small leaves, the lobes obtuse or short 

 pointed, growing in thickets at Shuswap and Enderby, B.C. ; the 

 other a much stouter plant with coarse, generally tive-lobed leaves, 

 lobes with long tapering points, stems almost smooth. Salmon Arm, 

 Shuswap Lake, B.C. (Macoun), and Klk liivcr, Eocky Mountains. 

 (Dawson.) 



I06. LINUM. 



(372.) L. Lewlsii, Tunsh, Fl. 1., 210; Trelease, Trans, tit. Louis 

 Acad. Science, V., 12. 



L.percnnc L. var. Lewim, Eat. & Wrif:lit; Gray, Man., ed. VI., 102. 



Eeferences under L. pcrenne, Linn., Part I., S"J, belong here. 



I07. GERANIUM. 



(3094.) G. DissECTDM, Jjinn.; Gray, Man., cd. VI., 104. 



Introduced in a few places in Canada. Port Arthur, west of Lake 

 Superior. (Dr. Britton.) Vicinity of Victoria, and at Nanaimo, Van- 

 couver Island. (Macoun.) 



121. CEANOTHUS. 



(402.) C. ovatus, Desf ; Macoun, Cat. 1., 96. 



Along the St. Clair River east of Point Kdward, Ont. (./. Dearness.) 



573. LIMNANTHES. 



(2116.) L. Macounii, Trelease, Rev. of (icran. 



L. Douglatii, Macoun, Cat., III., 502. 



Flcerkia proserpinacoides, Macoun, Cat., I., 91, in part. 



Glabrous, 2-3 inches high ; divisions of the leaves 5-9, remote, 3-6 

 mm. long, ovate, mosth" 3-cleft, their lobes broad and ver^' acute ; 

 flowers, 4-merou8, not showy as in the other species ; sepals oblong, 

 rather obtuse, enlarging somewhat in fruit ; petals white (?), oblong- 

 cuneate, erosely truncate, 3-4 mm. long ; stamens about equalling the 

 petals, anthers 4 mm. long; fi-uit obovoid, 3 mm. long, with very 

 prominent tubercles. (Trelease.) 



Professor Trelease in his Revision of the Geraniacese made this a 

 new species and named it after the discoverer. 



