568 THE FUE SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. 



76. Aster sibiricus, L. 



Common in exposed places on St. Paul Island. 



77. Achillea millefolium, L. 



Common on both islands. 



78. Chrysanthemum arcticum, L. 



Low saline meadows and on damp uplands. Common on both islands. 



79. Artemisia globularia, Ch:im. 



Common on barren moors and hilltops on both islands. 



80. Artemisia novegica, Fries, var. pacifica, Gray. , 



Common on both islands. 



81. Artemisia richardsoniana, Bess. 



Eare on St. Paul Island. 



82. Artemisia vulgaris, L., var. tilesii, Ledob. 



Common on hillsides on both islands. 



83. Arnica uualaskensis, Less. 



A few plants in one locality near the south e»d of St. Paul Island. 



84. Petasites frigida, Fries. 



By all ponds and boggy places on both islands. 



85. Senecio pseudo-arnica, Less. 



Sandy shores and sand dunes on both islands. 



86. Taraxacum o£Sciuale, Weber, var. lividum, Koch. 



Common on grassy slopes and rocky banks on both islands. 



87. Campanula uniflora, L. 



Common among moss on the lower hills on St. Paul Island. (7. pilosa of Mer- 

 riam's list has been excluded, as no specimens could be found in the United States 

 National Herbarium, and it has been reported by no one else. 



88. Campanula lasiocarpa, Chaui. 



On grassy banks and uplands. Common on both islands and very variable. 

 Small specimens collected in 189G in general appearance are widely different from 

 typical plants, but closer examination sliows that except as to size they differ only in 

 being less pilose on the calyx and less ciliate along the petioles. 



89. Pyrola minor, Ij. 



Rare on St. Paul Island. 



90. Armenia vulgaris, Willd. 



Common on both islands, 



91. Primula eximia, firecne, Pittonia, Vol. HI, p. 251. (Plate XCII.) 



Rootstock simple; scape, 6 to IG inches high, twice or thrice exceeding the foliage; 

 spatulate-oblong or oblanceolate leaves thin, glabrous, entire or obscurely crenate or 

 dentate; upper portion of the scape, and more particularly the pedicels, densely white- 

 farinose; umbel few-tlowered and somewhat one-sided, the tiowers inclining one way; 

 calyx cleft to the middle or a little more, the segments oblong-linear, scarcely acute; 



