— 5i 
For a longer trip, the route up the Spray River valley past the Spray Lakes, 
over Mt. Assinaboine Divide, is well worth investigation. While the first day’s 
journey is rather uninteresting from the denseness of the woods, the trip after 
that is a rare treat. The scenery from a camp on the north side of the Assina- 
boine Divide is perhaps the best within reach, especially the sunrise on the snow- 
fields. The mountain, with its shoulders and peaks, shows out so distinctly and 
clearly that it completely dominates the landscape. The divide is at an alti- 
tude of about 7000 feet and furnishes a typical mountain flora. The spongy 
ground and stream banks and the mountains to the north, which are easily climb- 
able, present an alpine flora that I hope later to describe in connection with an 
account of the Simpson Pass. In fact, the whole region is fine camping country. 
This trip, however, since it is expensive and means camping in the open, may 
not appeal to many. They may be sure that the easier, shorter trips near Banff 
will furnish enough botanical booty to prevent all disappointment at not being 
able to go further afield. 
Craigmyle, Alberta. 
LICHENS OF THE MOUNT MONADNOCK REGION, N. H.— NO. 6 
Thomas Durfee 
Under the direction of Dr. R. Heber Howe, Jr., I am continuing the publi- 
cation of this list, in which the following genera have already been published by 
Dr. Howe: Ramalina, Celraria, Evernia, Usnea, Alectoria, Teloschistes, Par- 
melia, Physcia, Pyxine, Baeomyces, Stereocaulon, and Cladonia. 
Genus: Gyrophora Ach. 
123. Gyrophora Dillenii (Tuck.) Arn. Four specimens; three fertile and 
one sterile. 
124. Gyrophora Muhlenbergii Ach. var. alpina (Tuck.). Ten specimens; 
eight fertile and two sterile. Three specimens labeled pennsylvanica belong here. 
125. Gyrophora erosa (Web.) Ach. One specimen, fertile. 
126. Gyrophora hyperborea (Hoffm.) Ach. Seven specimens, including one 
from Mt. Carrigan. All these are sterile. 
Genus: Umbilicaria (Hoffm.) Fw. 
127. Umbilicaria pustulata papulosa Tuck. Four specimens, all fertile. 
Two are labeled pustulata , one papulosa , and one is unlabeled. 
Concord, Mass. 
ODONTOSCHISM A MACOUNII IN ICELAND 
A. LeRoy Andrews 
At the time of publication of Evans’s paper on this species and its North 
American allies, 1 it was known from several localities in northern North Amer- 
ica, from* Greenland, Spitzbergen, and Norway. Since then its range has been 
1 Bot. Gaz., XXXVI, 32iff. 1903; cf. also Bryhn, Bryophyta in itinere polari Norvagorum 
secundo collecta, 42L 1906. 
