ms -* KEES >” » i —— ™ 
. s ‘ ™e ae os «ae * et Ee OS % 
—r * r 2 
wit ised 5 ae : 
the first part of Nie Kian one published, Dr. . | 
s7’s most interesting memoir, entitl led “Ou tlines 
Dist : received. 
t i ipoctadee in the study of any alpine or subalpine co 
oi eS 
© lection like the present, and has given n occasion to afew remark 
* 
in the following pee i e memoir itself I expect to give | 
some acc ccount of hereaft 
@ 
No.7 Me Black, the obliging Caritoiit ib Hookerian’ Herba- 
zomS ing my attention to this geet g enables me to correct an ob+ * 
vious error/in my ae g, in the first of this enumeration. The 
» plant is not Ranunculus hiner tay Hook, but an “OU ot ks stbal- 
‘pine state of R. foe aaa PSs i No, of his collee- * 
tion , to ie 
i we 
me 104, py uta, o 
discovered this species, so long taken forthe © original C Mewcaiian 
105. Cleome integrifolia, Torr. & Gray. The @. serrulata is probably 
a nonentity, or a mere variety of this. 
106. Viola bifora, L. This arctic-alpine Wecies of the Old World 
had been traced all the way round to N. Japan and Kamtschatkay but 
ee y to the next... 
ae ra ae ar. pubese ens, passing into V. saute, Smith 
(¥, = Re Ach exept in sd eo a ip seldom n erooked) a 
as closely ets to the 
Muhlenl or git does to the v. ‘ylation a the Old World V. a + 
should’ t therefore Lae been ae er Venta y Dr. 
Hooker, in ing all of this canina. Parry’s speci- 
om 
mens answer we ourgeau’s sed Sackatch 
i Saint om the plains. 
110. Viola palustris, m the alpine region, apparently, and 
the lustris. The- of our ine leet Ber oo Vz. 
epipsila, Ledeb. Dr. Hooker goes a step too far in Siti our V, 
blanda ‘(with its er ke sepals and white flowers) to V. palustris 
Our difficulty is to Keep he clear of V. primulefolia, and that 
clear of V. lanceolata. 
111. Geranium Carolinian 
112, Geranium Richardsoni, Fisch. & Mies > “var. ae. acer =e 
divisis nudiusculis.” Engelm. _ 
3 
me * 
