411 



Festuca rubra v. arenaria. Woodsia ilvensis. 

 Lycopodium alpinum. — hyperhorea. 



— Selagov.appressa. — glabella. 



— atmotinum v.pun- Botrijchium Lunaria. 

 gens. Equisetuni arvense. 



Aspidium fragrans. — variegatum. 



Cystopteris fragilis. 



On August 22°^ we left Scoresby Sund ; after a short visit 



to Cape Greg on the east coast of Liverpool Land on Aug. 



23''<î, and to Cape Brown in the mouth of Fleming Inlet on 



August 24^11, we made a longer visit to Fleming Inlet, Aug. 

 25th _ 96th. 



Cape Brown (Chr. Kruuse). 



On August 24*5^ we landed at Cape Brown, where the foot 

 of the mountain consisted mostly of barren débris. Yet a little 

 stream had cut itself a narrow and deep cleft in the rock, and 

 through it I went up the mountain. The rocks are highly ice- 

 ground and almost without any loose soils and, accordingly, 

 nearly devoid of continuous higher vegetation. Here and 

 there, however, in the cleft of the stream a little sand had 

 formed, and thanks to the avantages of shelter and with abun- 

 dant humidity the plants were thriving surprisingly well. I 

 noted during an ascent of about 300 m: 



Dryas octopetala f. minor, Chamcenerium latifolium, Si- 

 lène acaulis, Arenaria ciliata, Alsine biflora (partly flor. lila- 

 cinis), A. verna v. propinqua, Melandrium involucratum v. af- 

 fine, Cerastium alpinum f. lanatum, Draba alpina, D. nivalis, 

 D. Fladnizensis, 1). arctica, Papaver radicatum, Saxifraga 

 decipiens, S. cernua, S. oppositifolia, Pedicularis flammea, Cas- 

 siope tetragona, Vaccinium tdiginosum, Rhododendron lapponi- 

 cum, Campanula rotundifolia, Oxyria digyna, Salix arctica, 

 Luzula confusa, Car ex nardina, Poa glauca, P. pratensis, P. 

 cenisia, Festuca ovina, Cystopteris fragilis and Woodsia ilvensis. 



28* 



