214 REV. F. A. WALKER, D.D., F.L.S., ETC., 
57. Thymus serpyllum, Z., var. prostrata. Hornem Blédsberg 
58. Prunella vulgaris, Z., Bréinella, Blakolla. 
59. Myosotis arvensis, Roth., Kattaranja to all the genus. 
60. Mertensia maritima, Don. Lungnajud. 
61. Pinguicula vulgaris, Z., Lyfjagras. 
62. Plantago Coronopus, L. 
63. 5s maritima, Z., Kattartunga. 
64. Atriplex patula, Z.. form. 
65. Polygonum aviculare, Z., var., litorale oddvari or Blédarji to the 
usual state. 
66. Oxyria digyna, Camp. Olafstira. 
G7. Salix herbacea, Z., Grasvidir, or Kotungslauf. 
68. ,, glauca, L., v., ovalifolia ? 
69 Platanthera hyperborea. Lindley, v. minor Hornberi, Lange. 
70. Orchis latifolia, Z., f. 
71. 4, maculata, Z., Bronugr, and five other names. 
72. Luzula campestris, D.C. 
73. Eriophorum Scheuchzeri, Hippe. li f. 
74. 3 angustifolium, Roth. f *'* 
75. Carex rigida, Good. 
76. ,,  hyperborea, Dreyer, 
77.5 +. erytocarpa, C. A. Meyer. 
78. Poa alpina, L., f., vivipara. 
79. Cystopteris fragilis, Z. 
80. Agrostis alba, Z., Hvingras to all the species. 
81. Empetrum nigrum, L. 
82. Dancus Carota, Z., small form. 
T did not come across the common daisy (Bellis perennis) 
in Iceland, as it is very local there, and is only known 
certainly from two stationsin the island, namely, Eyjafjordur 
and Skagafjordur, although it must occur somewhere near 
Seydisfjordur, as Mr. Symington, in 1863, had specimens 
given to him by a native when staying there. The Icelandic 
names for wild plants are not always to be relied on; in 
Hjaltalin’s “Islenzte grasafreedi,” 1830, many of the names 
are manifestly only translations of the Latin names, and 
Fridrikkson, im an excelient paper in Groenlund’s “Islands 
Flora,’ (1881), takes hin to task on some of his Icelandic 
names. Fridrikkson is a native Icelander, and his sister, 
Miss Thora Fridrikkson, has added several localities to the 
Icelandic Flora. 
There are several interesting paragraphs in Baring-Gould’s 
Iceland, relative to the botany of the island, and to which 
anyone desirous of further information on the subject is 
accordingly referred. These may be found on pp. 795, 102, 
11.2; °113,; 134;,-179;* 186," 190,191, 214.5228, (24) eee 
Likewise in Paijkull’s Iceland, pp. 159, 176. Burton, in his 
Ultima Thule, has also some interesting remarks about the 
Iceland moss (Lichen Islandicus Cetraria Islandica) as well 
