Vegetable Productions qfthe HudsorCs Bay Countries, ^29 
Remarhs upon Table XI.— ’The materials of the preceding 
Table are principally derived from the Botanical Appendix to 
Captain Franklin’s Narrative^ which has furnished upwards of 
700 of the species. To these, 65 phsenogamous plants have 
been added from Pursh, that were collected at Hudson’s Bay 
by Tilden and others, and are preserved in the Sherardian 
and Banksian herbaria. The most northerly of Michaux’s plants 
being collected to the southward of Latitude 53°, do not enter 
into our list ; and the plants collected by Nelson and Menzies 
on the North-west coast, being from countries to the westward 
of the Rocky Mountains, and for the most part too far to the 
south, are also excluded. Thirty-three species, however, of 
ph^nogamous plants, from Mr Brown’s Botanical Appendix to 
Captain Parry’s first voyage, have been added to the column 
headed “ Barren Grounds,” together with seven from the her- 
baria made in Captain Parry’s second voyage, and a few from 
Mr Brown’s List of the Plants collected by Captain Ross, ma- 
king the entire list in the Table amount to 840 plants. • 
The collections of Captains Parry and Ross compensate for 
the loss of the summer collection of 18^1, in Captain Franklin’s 
journey. 
The structure of the Table is too simple to require explana- 
tion. The Woody Districts extend from Latitude 53i or 54° 
to Latitude 64° south, or nearly to Fort Enterprize. The Bar- 
ren Grounds from Latitude 64° to the most northerly parts visit- 
ed, or to 74°. By adding the plants in the last column to those 
in either of the two preceding ones, the whole vegetation of that 
district, as far as detected, is found. 
The phsenogamous plants in the preceding Table stand thus : 
Woody Region. Barren Grounds. Total, 
m 190 538 
there being 79 species common to the two districts. 
VoL. XII. NO, 24. APRIL 1825. 
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