290 GEOLOGTCAL SURVEY OF CANADA. 



Kicking Horse Lake, Rocky Mountains ; Selkirk Mountains around 

 the Summit Pass ; on Portage La Loche, Lat 57 ; on the summits of 

 Mount Mark and Mount Arrowsmith, Vancouver Island. (Macoun.} 

 Banks of the Saskatchewan. (Hooker Fl.) West coast of Newfound- 

 land. (J. Sell.) 



(3039.) L. clavatum, Linn.; Hook. Fl. II., 267. 



Very common in damp woods throughout Canada. West coast of 

 Newfoundland. (J.Bell.) Brigus, Newfoundland (R. Bell} Windsor, 

 Halifax, Truro and Pictou, N.S. (Sommer's Cat.) In dry woods, 

 common in New Brunswick. (Fowler's Cat.) Common on Anticosti 

 and Prince Edward Island, and along the Gasp Coast, Q. (Macoun.) 

 Vicinity of Ottawa. (Fletcher Fl. Ott.) Truro, N.S. ; and Sault Ste. 

 Marie, Ont. (Burgess.) Missinaibi River, Ont. (R. Bell.) Lake 

 Mistassini, N. B. Ter. (J. M. Macoun.) Common in eastern and 

 north-western Ontario. (Macoun.) Throughout Canada to the Sas- 

 katchewan. (Hook. Fl.) 



Var. ft. monostachyon, Hook. Fl. II., 267. 



Little Tobique Lakes, N.B., 1884. (Hay.) Along Brackley Point 



Road, Prince Edward Island, 1888. (Macoun.} Blood-vein River, 



Lake Winnipeg. (J. M. Macoun.) Rocky Mountains, north of 

 Smoking River. (Hook. Fl.) 



Var. d. Hook. Fl. II., 267. 



Northwest America, from Observatory Inlet to Stikine. (HooJc. Fl.) 

 Roadside, between Hastings and New Westminster, B.C., spikes four 

 instead of two; Mount Benson, near Nanaimo, Vancouver Island. 

 (Macoun.) 



(3040.) L. complanatum, Linn.; Hook. Fl. II., 267. 



West coast of Newfoundland. (J. Bell.} Halifax, Truro and Pictou, 

 N.S. (Sommer's Cat.) In dry woods; common in Kent Co., and at 

 Campbellton, N.B. (Fowler's Cat.) Tobique River, N.B. (Hay.) 

 Salmon River, N.B. (Wetmore.) In woods at Kingston, N.S. ; at 

 Cantire, Prince Edward Island, and along the Gaspd Coast, Q. 

 (Macoun.) Vicinity of Ottawa. (Fletcher Fl. Ott.) Missmaibi River, 

 Ont. (R. Bell.) Lake Mistassini, N. E. Ter. (J.. M. Macoun.) 

 Crane Lake, Muskoka, Ont. (Burgess.) Very common in cool woods 

 throughout northern Ontario and westward to Lake Nepigon, and 



