478 .. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OP CANADA. 



Macoun.) Very common along river banks and wet exposed places, 

 Anticosti. Very abundant along rivers and small streams in the 

 Rocky Mountains and far up their slopes on the 51st parallel. 

 (Macoun.) 



(8.) A. Drummondii, Watson. 



A. Baldensis, Hook. Fl. I, 5. Part I., No. 8. 



Slopes of the Rocky Mountains, Lat. 49. (Lyall.) Abundant on 

 the slopes of cool ravines and on the summits of the Eocky Mountains, 



from the Kananaskis to the summit of the Selkirks, Lat. 51. (Macoun.} 

 \ 



(9.) A. nemorosa, Linn. Var. (?) The British Columbian 

 form of this species is distinct from the eastern, having much smaller 

 flowers uniformly three-parted leaves and being in general appearance 

 quite dissimilar. Dean or Salmon River, B.C. (Dawson.) Not un- 

 common in woods near Victoria, Vancouver Island. (Fletcher.) In 

 woods, Port Moody, B.C. (Hill.) This may be the A. trifolia of 

 Linnaeus. 



Page 13. 



(13.) A Virginiana, Linn. Woodstock, N.B. (Vroom.) Lower 

 Kennebeccasis, Madawaska and St. Francis Eivers, N.B. (Hay.) 

 Andover, and along the St. John, N.B. (Wetmore.) 



(14.) A. multiflcla, DC. 



A. decapetala, Linn. Hooker Arct. PI. 



Eastern British America, north of the arctic circle. (Hook. Arct. PI.) 

 On gravel along the Jupiter River, Anticosti. (Macoun.) Fort 

 Churchill, at the mouth of the Churchill River, Hudson Bay. (B. Bell.) 

 Near Fort Selkirk, Youcon River, Lat. 62 45'. (Schwatka.) 



(15.) A. dichotoma, Linn. In tall grass on wet places at Salt 

 Lake and Jupiter River, Anticosti. (Macoun.) 



Page 14. 



(1*7.) A. Hepatica, Linn. Leaves of this species were brought 

 from Ashe's Inlet, Upper Savage Islands, Hudson Strait, by Dr. ^R. 

 Bell, 1885. 



3. THALICTRUM. 



(19.) T. anemonoides, Michx. In shady woods, southern part 

 of Oxford and Brant Co.'s, Ont. (Burgess.) Banks of the Humber, 

 near Toronto. (J. Ades Fowler.) 



