1898— 1902, No. 16.| FLOW. PLANTS AND FERNS OF N..W. GREENLAND. 514 
In Foulke Fjord, probably the same locality where Kane had 
collected it, it grew in the sward of the slopes beneath the rookeries of 
the little auk. 
Occurrence. S. Cape York (Stem); Inglefield Gulf: Verhoeff 
Nunatak (Meznan), Fan Glacier (WeETHERILL); Foulke Fjord, inside Etah 
(225, 1502). 
Antennaria alpina, (L.) GAERTN. 
A. alpina, Stmmons, Fl. Ellesm. (A. alpina, Natuorst, N. W. 
Gronl.]. 
The specimens from the only locality in N. W. Greenland that I 
have seen in the Stockholm herbarium, belong to a form whose leaves 
are rather densely woolly-haired on the upper surface also. 
Occurrence. S. Ivsugigsok (NatHorsT). 
Erigeron compositus, Pursu. 
E. compositus, Stumons, FI. Ellesm. [#. compositus, Harr, Bot. 
Br. Pol. Exp.; Mrewan, Contr. Greenl.]. 
Curiously enough, this handsome plant has been totally overlooked 
by most of the previous visitors to Foulke Fjord, where, however, it is 
rather abundant in the gravelly slopes, forming large tufts with numerous 
heads of flowers. Many were still in flower when I first visited the 
place, Aug. 16, 1898. : 
Occurrence. S. Inglefield Gulf (MezHan); Foulke Fjord (FEILpEn), 
at Etah (215, 1475). 
Campanulaceae. 
Campanula uniflora, L. 
C. uniflora, Stumons, Fl. Ellesm. [C. uniflora, Natuorst, N. W. 
Gronl.]. 
This plant has entirely escaped the american collectors unless the 
C. rotundifolia var. linifolia of Duranp, Enum. pl. Smith S., should be 
referred to this species. But that plant is recorded from the dubious 
locality ““Tessiussak” and therefore must be left out of consideration. 
It might, with better reason perhaps, be presumed that the “gentian” of 
which Kang, I Grinnell Exp., p. 142, speaks as being seen somewhere 
between Cape York and Cape Dudley Digges, is the present species. 
