No. I1.] THE BRYOPHYTES OF CONNECTICUT. 99 
Nova Scotia to West Virginia, west to Alaska and Wash- 
ington ; Europe; Asia. 
Rer. Mrs. Lowe, 57. 
Dicranella varia (Hedw.) Schimp. Dicranum varium 
Hedw. 
Clay banks and moist earth. Autumn. New Haven: East 
Haven, O. D. Allen; New Haven (1875), J. A. Allen; Orange, 
Young; Oxford, Harger; Woodbridge, J. A. Allen. 
Nova Scotia to Georgia, westward to the Pacific; Alaska; 
Europe; Asia; Africa. 
Rer. Eaton, 15, 61. 
Rhabdoweisia Br. & Sch. 
Rhabdoweisia denticulata (Brid.) Br. & Sch. 
Moist shaded cliffs, steep rocks and banks, but not on 
limestone, in mountainous or hilly regions. Summer. Lircu- 
FIELD: New Milford, Nichols; Salisbury, Gilman. ToLLann:. 
Stafford and Vernon, Nichols. Fatrrietp: Redding, Evans; 
Sherman, Nichols. NEw Haven: Beacon Falls, Nichols; 
Naugatuck, Evans; New Haven, O. D. Allen; Woodbridge 
(1878), J. A. Allen. 
Newfoundland to Wisconsin and North Carolina; Europe. 
Dichodontium Schimp. 
Dichodontium pellucidum (L.) Schimp. 
Banks of streams and wet rocks in the woods. Autumn. 
New Haven: Hamden (1881), J. A. Allen. 
Arctic America, Canada, and the northern United States; 
Europe; Asia. 
Oncophorus Brid. 
Oncophorus virens (Sw.) Brid. Cynodontium virens 
Schimp. 
Moist non-calcareous earth and rocks or damp wood in 
mountainous or hilly woods. Spring. ToLLanp: Stafford 
(1906), Nichols. 
Canada and the northern United. States; Europe? Asia. 
