-44 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OP CANADA. 



(2330.) T. coccinea, Eich. Hook. Fl. II., 179. 



Barren ground from lat. 64° to the shores of the Arctic sea; about 

 Jasper's Lake, in the Rocky Mountains, and on the west coast, north 

 of lat. 68°, to Ounalashka. {Hooker, Fl.) Kotzebue Sound, Chamisso 

 Island, and Cape Lisburne. {Rothr. Alask.) North east coast of 

 America. {Soaker, Arct. PI.) 



Var. major, Hook., FI. II., 179. 



Mackenzie Eiver. (Bichardson.) Only two specimens of this variety 

 have been gathered, and the writer has seen no specimens of either 

 form. 



(2331.) T. glutinosa, Willd. Pursh, Fl. I., 246 ; Hook., Fl. II., 1Y9. 

 Narthedum glviinosum, Michx., Fl. I., 210. 

 Cold bogs and borders of mountain lakes and rivers, Flat lands, 

 Restigouche Co. ; along the Upper St. John, Bel and Tobique rivers, 

 N.B. (Fowler, Cat.) Salt Lake, and in peat bogs, Anticosti. (Macoun.) 

 Mingan Islands, St. Lawrence Eiver. {St. Qyr.) Quebec, Island of 

 Orleans. {Thomas.) Cleghorn's, Quebec, 1821. {Dr. Holmes.) Shore 

 ■of Georgian Bay at Collingwood. {Logie.) Fairview Harbor, Drum- 

 mond Island, Thompson Point and McLeod Harbor, Georgian Bay. 

 {J. Bell.) Wet gravelly river flat, Southampton, Ont. {Burgess.) 

 North shore of Lake Superior. {Agassiz.) Shore of Lake Huron at 

 Eed Bay ; Livingstone Point, Lake Nipigon, along the shores of Thun- 

 der Bay, and the east coast of Lake Superior. {Macoun.) Lake 

 Mistassini, N.B.T. {J. M. Macoun.) On the Athabasca river near 

 Fort Assiniboine ; Bow Eiver valley, from Calgary westward to 

 Hector at the summit of the Eocky Mountains; abundant around 

 Home Lake and on the summit of Mount Arrowsmith, Vancouver 

 Island. {Macoun.) Eocky Mountains, 49th parallel. {Dawson.) Sitka. 

 ■{Bothr. Alask.) Bartlett Bay, Alaska. {Meehan.) From Hudson 

 Bay to Bear Lake, and to the Eocky Mountains. {Hooker, Fl.) 



(2332.) T. occidentalis, Watson. Proc. Am. Acad., XIV., 283. 

 In boggy ground, Beaver Creek valley, near Eoger's Pass, Selkirk 

 Mountains, 1885. {Macoun.) Easily distinguished from T. glutinosa 

 •by the long sepals and pedicels which are twice as long in each case. 



625. UVULARIA, Linn. Gen. 412. (BELL-WORT) 



.<2333.) U. perfoliata, Linn. Hook., Fl. II., 174 ; Pursh, Fl. I, 231. 

 U. perfoliata, var. minor, Michx., Fl. I., 199. 

 Eich woods, but of doubtful occurrence in Canada. The references 



