52 H. G. SIMMONS. [SEC. ARCT. EXP. FRAM 
Duranp, Enum. Pl., mentions no Gentiana', and it seems very impro- 
bable that any species of that genus should have reached so far, as no 
Gentiana is found elsewhere north of 69° in Western Greenland. 
Occurrence. S.Ivsugigsok (NaTHoRsT); Foulke Fjord, above Etah 
(1505). 
Scrophulariaceae. 
Pedicularis capitata, ApamMs. 
P. capitata, Stmmons, Fl. Ellesm. [P. capitata, Harr, Bot. Br. 
Pol. Exp.]. 
This species, first discovered by Hart to be a native of Greenland, 
is still found only in the same locality, where it grew rather sparingly 
among the grass along small rivulets. 
Occurrence. S. Foulke Fjord, Port Foulke (Hart), Point Jensen 
(CopPINGER), plateau above Etah (219). 
Pedicularis hirsuta, L. 
P. hirsuta, Simmons, FI. Ellesm.; OstTenreip, Plantes N. E. Grénl. 
[P. hirsuta, Duranp, Pl. Kan. et Enum. Pl. Smith 8.; Harr, Bot. Br. 
Pol. Exp., ex p. ?; Natuorst, N. W. Gronl.; Meenan, Contr. Greenl.; 
WETHERILL, List 1894; P. Kanei, Hayes, Op. Pol. Seal. 
This species is doubtless equally common in our area as it is in 
Ellesmereland and in Northern Danish Greenland. I have explained in 
Fl. Ellesm. how difficult it is to ascertain what some authors have 
understood by their names for the species of Pedicularis, and therefore 
I only refer to what is said there. In the following, the localities are 
named that can without any doubt be referred to the present plant. 
Occurrence. S. Cape York (WetHERILL); Ivsugigsok (NaTHORST); 
Wolstenholme Sound (INGLEFIELD); Inglefield Gulf: Northumberland Is- | 
land (Stem); M’Cormick Bay (MegHan); Foulke Fjord: Port Foulke 
(Hayes) and many other places (226); Fog Inlet (Kane); Rensselaer Bay 
(Kang). N. Bessels Bay (Hart). This locality is not certain, as Hart 
has also used the name for P. lanatd. 
Pedicularis Janata, Cuam. & ScHLECHTEND. 
P. lanata, Simmons, FI. Ellesm. [P. Kanei, Duranp, Pl. Kan.; P. 
Langsdorffit var. lanata, Wetuerit, List 1894]. 
1 Indeed in PI. Kan. he makes the supposition that Sawifraga oppositifolia might 
be the “gentian” of Kane. Natuorsr (Nachtr.) has already made the same con- 
jecture about Campanula uniflora. 
