388 GEOLOGICAL StJBVET OF CANADA. 



489. SCUTELLARIA, Linn. (SKULLCAP.) 



(1Y85.) S. lateriflora, Linn. Mad-dog Skullcap. 



Wet boj-ders of streams from Newfoundland, Anticosti and the 

 eastern provinces to the Pacific, and northward to Lake Athabasca. 



(1786.) S. canescens, Nutt. 



S. serrata, Pursh, Fl. II., 413. 



Eiver banks, western Ontario. (Gray.) Canada. {G-oldie.) We 

 have no knowledge of Canadian localities for this species. 



(1781.) S. parvula, Michx. 



Eiver banks, amongst sand or gravel. Halifax, N.S. (Sommers.) 

 (Doubtful.) Grosse Isle, Eiver St. Lawrence. (Shepperd.) St. Helen's 

 and Moffitt's islands, Montreal. (Maclagan.) Montreal Mountain, 

 below Priests' Farm, 1821. (Holmes.) On rocks in the vicinity of 

 Ottawa. (Fletcher Fl. Ott.) Wet rocky ground along the Moira 

 above Belleville ; also on both sides of the Bay of Quinte below Belle- 

 ville, and in crevices of rocks at Heely Falls on the Trent, ISTorthum- 

 berland Co., Ont. (Macoun.) Vicinity of Hamilton, Ont. (Logie.) 

 On sands, Pelee Point, Lake Brie. (Burgess <Ss Macoun.) Point Albino, 

 Lake Brie. (David F. Day.) Vicinity of Toronto. (Fowler.) 

 Islands east of Mississaugi Eiver, Georgian Bay. (J. Bell.) Sas- 

 katchewan. (Richardson.) 



(1788.) S. angustifolia, Pursh. 



Moist ground, British Columbia. (Gray.) Near the sources of the 

 Columbia Eiver. (Douglas.) 



(1789.) S. galericulata, Linn. 



Wet soil, either in woods, swamps or along rivers, from Newfound- 

 land, Anticosti and the eastern provinces to the Pacific, and north to 

 Fort Franklin on the Mackenzie Eiver. 



490. BRUNELLA, Linn. (SELF-HEAL.) 



(1790.) B. vulgaris, Linn. 



Prunella vulgaris, Linn. Pursh Fl. II., 411. 

 Abundant in pastures, by roadsides and in meadows ; also in wet 

 places in woods and by small streams, throughout the country, extend- 



