182 J^otice of some rare Plants of JVew England, 



rounded sinus. Lower side of the leaves and the inner surfiice of 

 the legumes with short, appressed, whitish hairs. Stem, hractes, 

 outer surface of the legumes, and especially the calyx, with black 

 hairs of the same kind. 



May, June. — On rocky ledges, overflowed in the spring, on the 

 banks of the Onion river, Burlington, Vermont. Dr. Robbins, 1829. 



wSnemone hudsonidna Richardson. Torrey and Gray, Flo- 

 ra, Vol. I., app., p. 65S. .Anemone multifida D.C., Tor- 

 rey and Gray, I., 13. 



On rocky ledges on the banks of the Onion river, Colchester and 

 Burlington, Vt. Dr. Robbins, 1829. The flowers of this species, at 

 this locality, are dull white, sometimes tinged with rose, not dark red, 

 as in the New York specimens. Still I consider that this must be 

 distinct from the plant of the Straits of Magellan. 



*5nem6ne cylindrica Gray. Torrey and Gray, Flora, I., 13. 

 var. alba Oakes. Flowers larger, sepals white. 



On rocky ledges in Castleton, Burlington, and other places in Ver- 

 mont, also in Uxbridge, Mass. Dr. Robbins, 1829. 



»5nem6ne pennsylvanica Linn. Mant. 247. 

 South Hero, Vermont. Dr. Robbins, 1829. 



Turritis glabra. Torrey and Gray, I., 78. 



On a rocky ledge in Paradise, Salem, Mass. Dr. S. Bass, 1819. 



Cardamne pratensis. L. 



Canaan, Connecticut, and various places in the north of Vermont. 

 Dr. Robbins, 1829. 



JVasturlium natans D. C. b. americanum Gray. Torrey and 



Gray, I., 75. 



Very fine specimens were collected by Dr. Robbins, at the mouth 

 of the Onion river, Ferrisburg, Vermont, in June, 1829. 



Jlfyriophyllum scabratiim Mich. IT., 190. 



At Block Island, Dr. Robbins, 1829. At Plymouth, Mass., Oakes, 

 1839. 



TillceVt simplex Nutt. Gen. Spp. 



On the dried borders of small ponds, at Nantucket, 1829. 

 Polygala Nuttallii, Torrey and Gray, ^pp. to Vol. I., p. 670. 



In Martha's Vineyard, Mass., 1829. 



Conioselinum canadense, Torrey and Gray, I. p. 619. (Se- 

 linum canadense Jllich. Cnidium canadense Sprcngel. 

 I found this long overlooked species in Lubec, Columbia, and Ban- 

 gor, Maine, in 1828. In 1829 Dr. Robbins found it in many parts of 



