1825, JUNE. PLANTS COLLECTED ISS 



imperfect ; leaves alternate, lanceolate, dentate, sessile, scabrous ; stem 

 branching, round, smooth, white ; flowers bright yellow ; 2 to 3 feet 

 high ; this very handsome plant I found on the dry banks of the Columbia, 

 a few miles below the Falls ; it is by no means plentiful ; what it belongs 

 to I cannot say ; I regret that seeds of it cannot be procured for the 

 present. 



(340) Syngenesia, annual ; flowers yellow ; in all dry grounds ; abun- 

 dant, particularly near the edges of woods and clumps of trees. 



(341) Campanula sp. ; perennial ; flowers blue ; rocky situations, near 

 the Rapids. 



(341*) Arabis sp. ; annual; leaves oblong-ovate, hispid; moist rocks; 

 rare. 



(342) Umbelliferae, annual; on dry rocky places, near the Rapids; 

 abundant. It is found also in low meadows, where it grows much larger 

 than on the rocks at the Rapids. S. 



(343) Syngenesia, perennial ; flowers yeUow ; root large and bitter ; 

 on dry sandy grounds, banks of rivulets. 



(344) Polygonum (?) sp., perennial ; leaves radical, lanceolate, on long 

 petioles, pubescent ; flowers small, white ; a strong branching plant, 

 2 to 4 feet high ; in subalpine ground between the Rapids and Falls ; 

 plentiful. 



(345) Syngenesia, perennial ; flowers yellow ; in dry soU at the 

 Falls. S. 



(346) (?) is this allied to Sanguisorba ; annual ; on dry soil, 



among bushes and woods, where they are partially shaded ; plentifid. S. 



(347) Echium sp., annual ; leaves alternate, upper ones hastate, 

 sessile ; segments of the calyx linear, ciliated ; flowers blue, tinged with 

 rose colour ; a flne small plant ; in all dry open plains, in light soU. S. 



(348) Lobelia (?) sp., annual ; flowers blue and white ; a small plant, 

 grows to a foot high ; in edges of pools and mountain rills. S. 



(349) Polygonum (?) annual ; a small plant, 2 to 6 inches high ; on 

 moist ground. 



(350) (?) Pentandria, Monogynia ; allied to Phlox ; flowers white ; 



a curious little plant, growing in great abundance with the former ; 

 I had not time to examine it when gathered. S. 



(351) Polypodium fragile'^ ; moist rocks. 



(352) Pteris crispa 2 ; same situations. 



(353) Aspl^nium melanocaulon 3 ; same situations. 



(354) Maclura (?) in an imperfect state, on the dry plains between the 

 Rapids ; a small tree. 



(355) Nyssa (?) in fruit ; in the like places ; a shrub 6 to 10 feet high. 



(356) Bartsia sp. * ; annua] ; dry open subalpine grounds. 



(357) Chora sp.; in small still pools. 



(358) Ranunculus sp., annual ; very small, in the like places. 



1 Oystopteris fragilis, Christensen, Ind. Eil. pp. 203, 528. 



2 Cryptogramma crispa, Christensen, loc. cit., pp. 187, 595. 

 ' A. trichomanes var. Christensen, loc. cit., pp. 121, 136. 

 * In another MS. he has Pedicularis. 



