1825, SEPTEMBER. PLANTS COLLECTED 145 



about a Panax or Aralia in Nortli-West America, wliicli grows 20 feet 

 high ; abundant. 



(476) Dianthus sp. ; perennial ; in seed, on the hill. 



(477) Chelone sp. ; perennial ; leaves opposite, ovate, dentate ; petals 

 short, ovate, acute, round, at the base dentate ; flowers fine rose ; also 

 seeds of this fine plant on the mountains. S. 



(478) Pterospora andromedea (Nuttall) ; this curious plant I found two 

 years ago near Albany, State of New York, in the low valleys ; this I 

 found in the thick shady woods, among moss, in rich earth, at a very 

 great height ; in flower and seed. 



(479) Vaccinium sp. ; deciduous ; leaves alternate, ovate, serrate ; 

 berries bright brown shining, pulpy and fine taste ; very fine flower, 

 large and abundant ; young shoots red, old white ; 4 to 8 feet high ; on 

 the summit of the mountains, plentiful. One of the three shrubs on 

 the top of the hills, Sorbus, and a Monoecious one which to me is unknown. 



(479*) Monoecia ; leaves lanceolate, glabrous, sulphur-yellow below ; 

 in flower and half -ripe globular fruit ; a shrub 4 to 10 feet high ; on the 

 summit of the hills ; abundant. 



(480) Rhododendron sp. ; imperfect ; 4 to 6 feet high ; on the hills ; 

 plentiful under the shade of pines. 



(481) Rubus sp. ; small; probably fistillatus ^ ; on the tops of the 

 hills ; rare. 



(482) Lycofodium denticulatum " ; in moist places on the hills ; 

 abundant. 



(483) Pyrola secunda ; in woods ; plentiful. Pyrola umhellata 3 ; 

 plentiful. 



(484) Pyrola sp. ; small ; same places ; plentiful. 



(485) Pyrola rotundifolia ; only one species of it could be found. 



(486) Monotropa sp. ; annual ; in thick shady woods ; only one 

 specimen. 



(487) Pyrola sp. ; small ; rare ; in the like places. 



(488) Cornus canadensis ; in fruit. 



(489) Syngenesia perennial ; flowers yellow ; rare ; on the side of 

 the river ; only one plant. 



(490) Gramineae, perennial ; on the sands ; plentiful. 



(491) (?) small plant ; bifoliate ; fruit globular, bright azure 



colour ; in shady upland woods ; abundant. S. 



(492) Vaccinium sp. ; imperfect ; different from any which I have 

 seen ; I regret that no seeds or flowers of it could be found. 



(493) Artemisia sp. ; perennial ; on the sandy banks of river, with 

 the following species, all in abundance : 



(494) Artemisia sp. ; small species. 



(495) Artemisia sp. 



1 Bubus arcticus var. grandijlorus, S. Wats. Bibl. Ind. N. Am. Bot. p. 314. 



2 Selaginella denticulata. Baker, Handb. Fern. Allies, p. 37, but this is a native 

 of the Mediterranean region, so Douglas must have made a slip of the pen. Did he 

 intend to write Lycopodium dendroideum ? — which is referred to L. obscurum. Baker, 

 loc. cit., p. 24. 



' Ohimaphila umhellata, A. Gray, Syn. Fl. N. Am. ii. i. p. 45. 



L 



