174 Report of the Brown-Harvard Expedition. 



as occurring in Labrador, inasmuch as many so reported 

 were observed in Canadian portions of the Labrador penin- 

 sula, unless in the above lists they are given definite locality 

 within the limits of Labrador proper as these limits are now 

 defined, i. e., from Blanc Sablon north to latitude 52°, thence 

 along the height of land to a point on Ungava Bay, a little 

 south of Cape Chidley, and thence following the coast 

 around the latter back to Blanc Sablon. 



None of the fungi here definitely or approximately 

 named have been previously reported in the above-named 

 lists. Of the mosses, eleven are new to the Labrador coast, 

 and five others have been reported heretofore from one 

 locality only. All seven of the hepatics here named are now 

 reported for the first time, although three of these names can 

 be given as yet only provisionally. Five of the lichens are 

 apparently new to Labrador. 



Among the phenogamous plants there is a considerable 

 number that are of especial interest. Twenty-three of them 

 are new to the Labrador coast. Two of these (Pyrola 

 chJorantha and Solix uva-iirsi) have been reported already 

 indefinitely from the "coast," but this may refer sometimes 

 to that part of the coast that belongs to Quebec. Nine are 

 new to the coast, but have been found previously in other 

 parts of the Labrador peninsula. These are : Oxytropis 

 podocarpa, Saxifraga Hircuhis, Gentiana propinqtia, Abies 

 balsatnea, Juncus castaneus, Liizula hyperborca, Eriophorum 

 alpimim, Cotebrosa aquatiea, Poa nemoralis. Six others also 

 are new under names here given, but may probably have 

 been reported before under the name of another species or 

 variety, namely: Stellaria humifusa var. ovalifolio, Epilobium 

 angnstifoUum forma stenophylla, Coelopleurum actceifolium, 



