APPENDIX. 
315 
3. Small Shrubs and Herbaceous Plants. 
Agrimonia Eupatoria (common agrimony), not uncommon. 
Circcea Alpina (enchanter’s nightshade), very common in woods. 
Nasturtium palustre (marsh cress), var. hispidum, common as at 
A. Smith’s. 
Aralia hispida (bristly sarsaparilla), on West Branch, both years. 
Aralia nudicaulis (wild sarsaparilla), Chesuncook woods. 
Sagittaria variabilis (arrow-head), common at Moosehead and 
afterward. 
Arum tripliyllum (Indian turnip), now ariscema , Moosehead carry 
in 1853. 
Asclepias incarnata (swamp milk-weed), Umbazookskus River 
and after, redder than ours, and a different variety from our var. 
pulchra. 
Aster acuminatus (pointed-leaved aster), the prevailing aster in 
woods, not long open on South Branch July 31st; two or more feet 
high. 
Aster macrophyllus (large-leaved aster), common, and the whole 
plant surprisingly fragrant, like a medicinal herb, just out at Telos 
Dam July 29, 1857, and after to Bangor and Bucksport; bluish 
flower (in woods on Pine Stream and at Chesuncook in 1853). 
Aster radula (rough-leaved aster), common, Moosehead carry 
and after. 
Aster miser (petty aster), in 1853 on West Branch, and common 
on Chesuncook shore. 
Aster longifolius (willow-leaved blue aster), 1853, Moosehead and 
Chesuncook shores. 
Aster cordifolius (heart-leaved aster), 1853, West Branch. 
Aster Tradescanti (Tradescant’s aster), 1857. A narrow-leaved 
one Chesuncook shore, 1853. 
Aster, longifolius like, with small flowers, West Branch, 1853. 
Aster puniceus (rough-stemmed aster), Pine Stream. 
Diplopappus umbellatus (large diplopappus aster), common along 
river. 
Arctostaphylos uva-ursi (bear-berry), Kineo, &c., 1857. 
Polygonum cilinode (fringe-jointed false buckwheat), common. 
Bidens cernua (bur-marigold), 1853, West Branch. 
Ranunculus acris (buttercups), abundant at Smith’s dam, Che¬ 
suncook, 1853. 
