210 A NATURALIST IN THE GREAT LAKES REGION 



(Fig. 122), red and white baneberry, Solomon's seal, waterleaf, 

 sweet cicely, clearweed (Pilea pumila) , bedstraw, ginseng, touch- 

 me-not. Certain kinds of ferns are very characteristic of such 

 woods, and the many sorts that grow are here noted for their 



Figs. 266-271: Fig. 266. — Green dragon, .4;- /^acwa dracontium; Fig. 267. — 

 Baneberry, Actaea alba; Fig. 268. — Waterleaf, Hydrophyllum virginianum; Fig. 

 269. — Sweet cicely, Osmorhiza Claytoni; Fig. 270. — Clearweed, Pilea pumila 

 Fig. 271. — Bedstraw, Galium aparine. 



luxuriance. The beech fern (Fig. 274), maidenhair (Fig. 275), 

 wood spleen wort (Fig. 276), pale wood fern (Fig. 277), Christ- 

 mas fern (Fig. 278), lady fern (Fig. 279), margined fern (Fig. 280), 

 florists' fern (Fig. 281), and ostrich fern (Fig. 282) are among the 



