858 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
gotten in 1888, in tamarack, Norway Township, Racine 
Co. No present station for it known. 
633. Vaccininm Pennsylvanicum, Lam. Early Blueberry. 
Probably extinct; a sheet in Dr. Davis’ herbarium 
gotten in 1879 in the little bog noted for No. 630. 
634. Yaccinium macrocarpon, Ait. (Oxycoccus macrocarpus, 
Pers.) Large Cranberry. 
Pare; bogs, edge of tamarack, Wind Lake, Pacine 
Co. The occurrence of the Large Cranberry in South¬ 
ern Wisconsin is of especial interest because this species 
as limited by Eernald (Phodora, Dec. 1902, pg. 234) 
is confined for the most part to the Atlantic Coastal 
Plain! The Cranberry of the sphagnum bogs of North¬ 
ern Wisconsin is Y. Oxycoccus, L., var. intermedium, 
Gray, Syn. El. ii. pt. 1, ed. 2,396 (1886). 
Primulac'B^e. Primrose Family. 
635. Steironema ciliatum, Paf. This and the two following 
numbers are commonly called Loosestrife. 
Common; low grounds. 
636. Steironema longifolium, A. Gray. 
Common; moist prairies. 
637. Lysimachia thyrsiflora, L. 
Occasional; swampy grounds. 
638. Trientalis Americana, Pursh. Starflower. 
Occasional; deep woods. 
639. Dodecatheon Meadia, L. Shooting-star. 
Common; prairies. 
Oleaceve. Olive Family. 
640. Eraxinus Americana, L. White Ash. 
Common; woods and roadsides in all soils. 
641. Eraxinus nigra, Marsh. (E. sambucifolia, Lam.) Black 
Ash. 
Common; moist woods, along banks of streams or 
borders of swamps. 
