Botany and Zoology. 77 
wastes of Spitzbergen, North Greenland, and Melville Island,— 
small, hardy, and tuft-forming plants, which often display an un- 
expected splendor of flowers with the purest and deepest colors. 
Then came the gray osiers, juniper and birch, cherry-ash and 
rowan, with a host of new immigrants. The moisture increased, 
Siving up. 
tain districts, on the moist mountain slopes and in the forest val- 
leys, as also on wild rubble-slopes, under steep walls of rock, = 
also found beyond the borders of the country ; there are peculiar 
forms, but none distinct enough from its congeners to be upei? 
a i i , 
trict With a race markedly different from the common type of the 
Species elsewhere. — 
4. Genera Plantarum auctoribus G. Bentaam et J. 
? 
1. secund : ; 
iim Ordines XLV, Caprifoliaceas—Plantagineas. Londoni, 1873 
~1876.—This is the title page, somewhat shortened, of the s 
