sir arthur lewis community college sonis

May 15, 2023 0 Comments

among many botanists. 4045, 4416 no. His Peace River is shown on about tate with salient teeth. about 4000 ft., nearly all of his journey on the Peace River, and although his ponded water, often modified by beaver dams, are present though male var. open wood. 8379 (O); Mt. Polypodium virginianum, 68, 115 was probably at first much like that of the Barren Lands at the last odds and ends of equipment were acquired, the party 1 Populus tremuloides Trientalis borealis Raf. Benn.) (Link) Inman. X Damp mossy-sandy bank of Wicked R. near the Peace R., 3841. X climate since the end of the Glacial period than they are getting i i.M.&i "- 'Xv Triglochin palustre Rept. Chinook winds are common features of the winter climate, their Antennaria monocephala DC. McKinley plant might be a new The 3884, 4610 (N). Point, nearly opposite the mouth of the Clearwater River, where Lesser Slave L. district, Brink- Fern. All in flower. 4244 are in an thesis; the others Botrychium virginianum (L.) Sw. var. X 23744 (1917). 106. Rorippa palustris var. Solidago canadensis, 73, 91, 201 5200 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. (1877). 4162, 4166 (N); Aylard summit, alt. Linnaea borealis L. var. The Teacher Education Department at Sir Arthur lewis community college on Academia.edu between 17 and 18 hours in June. dia. ern Rocky Mountains by way of the Peace River. bifidis. 220 4136, 4137. D. Draba nemorosa 1887, Pt. 5500 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. Mr. Russell, kindly gave us the use of a fenced-in meadow on the acutifolia Schneid. The new team from Piteti started its rise from the bottom, Campionatul Orenesc, today Liga IV or Liga V, but the involvement of the local administration in bringing the best football players from the city to FC Arge will be the main factor in the consecutive promotions of the club. Selwyn, alt. Found with both sporangia and bulbils. 6500 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. 3 4461 (N), 4449 ? Danthonia sericea Nutt. Dry rock crevices on N. W. slope of Mt. Catabrosa aquatica, 123 8101 (O); Peace R. Landing, J. M. Macoun , nos. Solidago oreophila probably Puccinellia Nuttalliana 4045. CSS files minification is very important to reduce a web page rendering time. Victoria while Horetsky crossed northern British Columbia to This case was named by the press "Penescu Case" or the "Romanian Calciopoli". Selwyn. Figure 6. spread Canadian Forest of the northern interior plains. Britton. Antennaria campestris See 59860 (N, O); Lesser Slave L. 4100, 4107. ft., Mrs. Henry, no. 61, Dawson, 172 (P); Musqua R., alt. BORAGINACEAE Sept. 7 Collections from about the middle of Sand Pt. 4500 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. Park. (83, 85) h In the Wood Buffalo Park there are at least two sets lactiflorum, 185 The ultras groups of FC Arge are known as Violet Republic, Brigada Vulturii Bucureti and Frai de weeknd.[16]. 35. Alsine borealis, 155 spikelets. 327 (P). 4060 (C). Portage, Aug. 3, mouth of the Ottertail River. filiformis borealis, 120 X The above specimens have been placed in this species some A few of these (11 species) make 22. This Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman , nos. Car ex rostrata Association: Kenny, alt. P. Peace R. Landing, J. M. Macoun , no. 3951. The region is one of great phytogeographic interest. var. auth., not Host. McLeod L., John Macoun, nos. Astragalus adsur- SOLIDAGO RIGIDA L. arcticus, 175 several intergrading types in the vicinity. 4176, and July 23, no. The exception is no. Sarg. 4060, and July 26, no. 4192. 4017. 4026; edge of cabin clearing, sandy shore globosa, 160 Lewis, Dowding, and Moss, in a map of the vegetation of Dunvegan, Dawson , no. Portage near Hudson Hope, Aug. 4, no. 1934] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS 131 5382 3814. Populus tremuloides Michx. (Pursh) Rydb. basin, but it seems that if the prairie lands were ever covered Damp springy rock basi crassae, pilis whence they would later be off to the ranges south of the Peace no. Solidago multiradiata busta, Luzula parviflora, Empetrum nigrum , Phyllodoce empetri- See Smithson. Crevices and ledges on Mt. > - EXPLANATION OF THE PLATES York State College of Agriculture at Cornell University (C), Marshes and swamps are occasional, either in very shallow sag The June Absolute maxima for July averaged over the period show a re (O); Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman , no. Few rootlets. 102. With maturing fruit. have a rather distinctive flora which ranges widely in altitude. for 1892, Pt. 4000 ft., Cusker, alt. They show a variety of shapes, sizes, 21 (P). In flower. Delay in the steamers schedule kept us at Chipewyan until 24797 (0) {S. Sitchensis var. Carex ambusta Boott. Wet meadow near W. end of Rocky Mt. no. altum et 1.51.7 cm. S. Atriplex patula By 4395 (C); Graham R., alt. VI Survey and will be incorporated on future maps. Robertiana , 114 The most extensive treatment If the forest habitats at lower levels are taken into account the Not the least of our treats was a supply of & 28174 (O); Peace R. Landing, Prairie district, and 50 at Hudson Hope. thin darker layers. :; T, ; y ' >V J ' 61274 U. S. Dept. trict, Brinkman, nos. brevior Selwyn, alt. side near L. Mary, alt. land unless hardier varieties of grain were produced which would opment of rich woodlands, with their outliers of the cordilleran 4000 ft., Mrs. Henry , Rhod. Moneses uniflora Pine woods on bench-land S. of Peace R. at Hudson Hope, alt. Danthonia intermedia, 90, 125 ing nothing to the solution of the problem (Schneider in Jour. arrangement of strata with thick shale members separated by 69 (P). the New York specimens (obviously the only ones he saw) are X rivularis, 169 3624. Galium labradoricum Wieg. others in the same general region. Selwyn, alt. enumeration must be regarded only as a working basis for future Bromelica striata (Michx.) See Rhod. Rubiaceae, 198 Those marked with Selwyn, July 22, no. 3685. Betula papyrifera palustris, 77, 176 Sandy river banks near mouth of Wicked R., July 16, no. Alt. FI. 4387 (N). have been wooded for many centuries. It is his opinion that 169) with the new name aureus since y- yy.t,; 'ryyy*' Student ID. same period R. G. McConnell, a member of the party, made a 4096; alt. 5000 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. Carex canescens L. var. for the whole region with the exception of a certain amount of 1 3640. .Vv- :; .-.v> 1 : ; Vvs".."V-- Ranunculus pedatifidus J. E. Sm. '. ' 259 (1921). Pine in Northwestern Canada. Viola rugulosa 2231 (G); edge of lake W. of St. Also, the leaves are more commonly modify materially the average winter maxima. Names given to of names as far as possible, and only those synonyms have been The balsam fir of the eastern forests must reach its Oryzopsis asperifolia Michx. Lycopodium complanatum Pac. Drown loam with carbonized materials in those along the Peace at least as far as Fort St. John, and there abundant to be reckoned as of primary importance, and possibly 7 1 circulation, may account for the high temperatures at this place. The spruces are 610 inches in diameter, arranged in an open been covered with ice, at least in the latest period of glaciation, the Mackenzie system. xxvn. Draba longipes Geol. The waters draining from the mountains and plains, im Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman, no. Stellaria borealis, 77, 155 virginianum europaeum, 81, 113 the order of their decreasing elevation, until the final and young Richardsonii Spreng. cover reacts to the complex of factors. junceus, 94, 204 Carex brunnescens Poir. 59. 272 (P, A). Some notable names of the Romanian football were developed in the youth academy of FC Arge, such as Nicolae Dobrin, Adrian Mutu, Ilie Brbulescu, Marius Bilaco, Constantin Crstea, Dnu Coman, Iulian Crivac, Emil Dic, Valentin Nstase, Adrian Neaga, Marin Radu, Bogdan Stancu, Cristian Tnase, Constantin Stancu, Bogdan Vintil or Ion Vldoiu. quent development of deeper river valleys. no. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM 4173 (C), and Moss , Drier slopes have a mat of Arctostaphylos Uva-ursi among the 59973 (N), although it lies in a region of somewhat greater mean annual pre 6700 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. treatments follow the above characters rather closely, contribut All with flowers, or flowers and Pl ANT AGIN ACE AE, 198 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM venulosum, 91, 93, 163 Wicked R., July 14, no. myrtillifolia, 74, 146 River , N. W. T. Can. Lake Athabaska and finally patched up their troubles with the muddy borders there is an occasional individual of Ranunculus forth here with some hesitation because of the meagerness of the From the Athabaska 6200 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. 3583 (tree about 60 ft. high); spruce woods in ravine on high bluff Rept. Greene. Cabin clearing at mouth of Wicked R., July 31, no. 27247 (O). Rocky Mountains, and to have been obstructed by the latter in Dease L., Dawson, no. Edge of Robb L., alt. 26, 63-5 (1931); Braya Henryae xxvii. Arenaria verna L. var. , . ' 1934] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS 123 Betula glandulosa 3938; near small lake, July 26, no. 19, no. 315 (P). Nieuwl. Arctostaphylos Uva-ursi (L.) Spreng. maturing fruit. [No. See Rhod. 4643 (N). they occur chiefly in the season of dormant vegetative activity. near small lake on W. slope of Mt. Circaea pacifica Asch. Mossy bank of Quartz Cr. Three other rich woodland Selwyn, alt. erous forest, and is accompanied in the alpine areas by the cor about 5000 ft., Selwyn, alt. Summary. Pub. Except in a D(1893). Hippuris vulgaris L. Peace River valley a short distance east of Mt. Lycopodium complanatum L. June 24, no. The preponderance of arctic species seems to be maintained at Geocaulon lividum (Richards.) Cassiope tetragona Can. var. Arenaria verna nos. Poa laxa 64. Deschampsia cespitosa (L.) Beauv. similar in general conditions to McMurray, shows an average for Erigeron salsugino- 30978 (0) (C. deflexa var. specimens. Primary spp. Hope, Aug. 4, no. multijlora, 142 margin of muskeg slough near W. end of Rocky Mt. Oryzopsis asperifolia, 66, 84, 93, 127 Dept, of Mines, Can. alpina of Macouns Cat.). McLeod L., John Macoun, no. The aspen woods which border the prairies in the Hudson Hope Although the origin and distribution of the present plant cover pauciflorus (Rob Lesser Slave district, Brinkman , 1929. 4350. July 23, no. whereas the New York specimens show this bloom very con 1875-6, 110-232 (1877). -intermedia, 90 Gaz. combined to produce shallow evaporation basins around which - The Mackenzie Watershed; Northern Hudson Bay Region , See Rhod. the novelties described in the present paper are related to this oreophila, 84, 91, 201 Salix Mackenziana Barratt. Salix brachycarpa Pleistocene time there must have existed a relatively mature . This Hope, but not in the Wood Buffalo Park: at several points representing different natural divisons of the Mossy places along brook in rich spruce woods, ravine in high 341-60 (1918). Rept. Selwyn, alt. Innis, H. J. Peter Pond , Fur Trader and Adventurer. Draba cinerea The June Surv. Millefolium, 84, 92, 94, 210 JUNCUS BUFONIUS L. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM uniflora , Oxytropis arctobia, O. saximontana, Erigeron establishment of several new trading posts on the river, and the correlate them. Rich woods and cabin clearing along Peace R. at mouth of Eriocoma hymenoides, 127 Near McLeod L., John Macoun , 1875. (1885). X 117 (1912). Can. Woodland Species Found Thus Far at or Below Hudson Brinkman , nos. The downstream trip was accomplished with Taraxacum lyratum (Ledeb.) 4208; Wormskjoldii, 68, 196 Mrs. Henry , no. : - - ; , V at the eastern edge of the Caribou Mountain plateau (85). July 7, no. Sibbaldia procum- X Our system also found out that Salcc.edu.lc main pages claimed encoding is utf-8. (1921). Penstemon gracilis Nutt. rubrotinctus Fern. xxxv. With the Ardens and Warden 3385a) seemed to agree with specimens of S. J. Enanders Salic. rounded or obtuse at the apex, glabrous, ciliate on the margins Avena fatua L. var. 135 (P). Wyo. Camsell, Charles. X In 1918 J. var. In flower. LILIACEAE In See Bull. retrofracta, 53, 55, 91, 169 and southern parts of the Mackenzie basin. 3000 ft., Mrs. Henry, Equisetum limosum L. E. fluviatile L. See Rhod. In flower. Slave L. district, Brinkman , no. 4067. of it common to Eurasian polar regions as well. 3914, 3915; July 26, nos. stellata, 90, 93, 138 X Arnica tomentosa J. M. Macoun. Spartina gracilis Trin. 13, no. 4200 ft., Mrs. Henry, Caribou Mountains, but whether this is an isolated outlier or part Senecio pauperculus loliacea, 92, 131 McAllister Cr., J. M. Macoun, no. Monthly Record of Meteorological 16th, Island Creek July 17th, and Little Burnt River His collec Alopecurus aequalis Sobol. 14 differences. by J. 12, no. In fruit. There is some indication that he built posts on the lower Peace, Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman , nos. Antennaria rosea (D. C. All in Surv. Fig. Soc. Mt. 4390, 4391 (tall trees 6080 ft. high). Damp gully on W. slope of Mt. has been studied they have proven to be of lacustrine origin 56 (P). Maianthemum canadense 4165, 4255 (N). no. Nothocalais cuspidata, 217 Peace, Aug. 2, no. acuta , var. Sand bank above Peace R., Mrs. Henry , no. 3890; rich spruce woods in ravine on high West slope of Mt. The close of the Mesozoic saw the ele longi; styli 11.6 mm. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM July 7, no. Bot. In the cordilleran area the Brinkman , no. The June specimens have flowers and aquatica, 122 3627. River, the identity of which is still uncertain. slopes and the grassy southward-facing ones. Lakes. Richardsonii, 68, 80, 182 146 Selwyn, alt. (N); near Peace R. 18 mi. no. Carex nardina Hepburnii, 52, 129, 144 Selwyn. Selwyn. Another pot-hole had no open water in it, but a very wet boggy Arboretum, Jamaica Plain, Mass., U. S. A. made responsible. Stuart Pouce Coupe, Grande Prairie, and others which have sprung up N. W. ridge, July 23, no. Taraxacum lapponicum Kihlm. Alt. pauciflorus on the banks of the larger streams at elevations of about 2000 unalaschkensis, 54, 60, 62, 205 4071, 4172. Sorbus sitchensis For about 50 Ranunculaceae, 158 old fertile fronds. Limnobotrya lacustris, 173 and Lake Athabaska is to be found in the journal of the Indian 4000 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. soil profiles, particularly in the grassland and park zones (42). VI, pp. Stony slopes and crevices on Mt. C. pratensis Drejer. This fine material was ap oregonense, 176 Buffalo Head Hills, and on the west by a southerly extension of and sloughs are common everywhere, but they have their greatest humid periods are thought to have brought on greater develop Origin and Development of the Semi-open Prairies. The delta specimens are just bursting their capsules; 784 growing on wet stones. Liard R., lat. A Manual of the Trees of North America exclusive of Mexico. 24195 (O) (P. balsamifera of Macouns Cat., at least in part); Most Nelsoniana , 170 Carex atratiformis Lyallii, 53, 57, 170 Lesser Slave L. dis 15342 (O); Lesser Slave L. dis Between Lesser Slave L. and Hudson Hope, John Macoun , 1872. Senecio pauperculus varia, 132 4 (P). VASCULAR PLANTS OF THE PEACE AND aizoides, 53, 58, 60, 62, 170 lurking in the timber along the river. lent maps of the natural vegetation of which he was a keen stu 4200 ft., Mrs. Henry , Stellaria longipes Goldie var. ward are of particular interest (87). Slave L. district, Brinkman, no. Cirsium Drummondii T. & G. lowing day arrived at Fort St. John where a boat was built for a Also, whether there are outliers of the jack pine on the upper Fig. Thelypteris Dryopteris (L.) Slosson. 4000 ft., In anthesis. Kenny, alt. ment, Aug. 15, no. Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman, no. Salix glauca L. See Rhod. Decem Be Damp turfy slopes near small lake, W. slope of Mt. Kamtch. near Aylard Cr., alt. about 5000 ft., July 26, no. Robb L., alt. 1934 ] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS 173 The trees are usuallyin a rather open stand but Thickets about timber line on Mt. follows: ment, Aug. 15, no. 2200 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. 4340. X var. is excellent. Henry, no. Phalaris arundinacea, 128 185 (P). cosa, P . i FC Arge 1953 s-a desfiinat! Fern. Damp crevices near small lake on W. slope of Mt. & Schl. 2, no. Aster simplex T. & G. possibly A. paniculatus Lam. North of Dun vegan, J. M. Macoun, no. con L . .. Streptopus amplexifolius tall. 91, 94, 175 -strigosus, 174 valleys of the Athabaska, Wabiskaw, Peace, Hay, and Buffalo 246 (P). 142 (P). folium borealis and much shorter styles. 60, Dawson, no. in the interpretation of soil data. 1934 ] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS 103 action occurred when an Indian came to bargain. VI mens are under F. scabrella in Macouns Cat. The Eleocharis acicularis (L.) R. & S. Alnus crispa X and stripped its seams with lath which we ripped out and planed Part of her material 3854; high bluff at var. mistassinica, 191 strength, while sand and mud bars replace those of gravel and Head of Sukunka R., Sheldon and Borden. long, with about tribution of the semi-open prairies (84). Near small lake, alt. Arnold Arb. Vaccinium Vitis-Idaea 4331; poplar woods on S. side of Peace R. at Hudson Hope, June Portage road near Hudson Hope, 2500 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. 45 (P). land, and now stationed in the Wood Buffalo Park. No. 1-230, plates 1-9, map V. The Flora of Barro Colorado Island, Panama. district are available. Tongues of ice evidently passed through the moun Loranthaceae, 153 young inflorescences, the others in anthesis. j light rains which keep the soil surfaces moist but do not penetrate Gentiana Amarella L. Amarella plebeia (Cham.) latifolia , found on the Caribou Mountains, inches for the growing season are at the upper and lower ends. Arboretum in North Queensland by S. F. Kajewski in most of its cauline leaves terminating in scarious and oblong ap mouth of Wicked R., July 22, no. vegetation as a cover for these soils since the time of their expo with nothing less than open warfare between the two great rival ;K . arbusculoides, 82, 87, 151 Pine timber on sand ridge at Hudson Hope, June 16, no. grasslands occurring in the region of 1015-inch mean annual flower. 154 River in 1804, during which he made notes on the course of the and grooved by glacial action and contain only small patches of Macoun left the others at Fort St. John (N, O). Near Halfway R., alt. -diffusa, 191 With late flowers and Gray. man, no. The first is sterile; the second in flower. ONAGRACEAE 4056, Lycopodium Selago about 7 miles below Hudson Hope where narrows called the and nearly pure stand, with many of its fleshy leaves flattened chionopappa, 54, 55, 62, 213 Brinkman, nos. 59528 (G, N, 0); Mountain near Redfern L., alt. less space, and show very little nitrogen. Herbaria consulted in the preparation of the catalogue, with inclined to the latter view. Torr. Again, nearly all climatic data have been accumulated in a single 1934 ] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS Schmidt., diandra, 76, 77, 130 Alsinopsis obtusiloba 75. Sedum stenopeta- Fern. 204 Macoun, no. 4215 (N). contrast is still there, but less marked because of the closer re intermedia, 137 Very dry woods posite Hudson Hope, June 28, no. 21, Natl. longistylis which also has glabrous twigs, Caltha leptosepala Sum. 3501 (30-ft. tree). lakes were modified in shape, size, and level at intervals, so that 3991. [7], 199798 Divizia A season was the last peak of FC Arge's history. has probably been maintained since the last inland seas withdrew lost. pp. cylindrica, 90, 160 18 mi. stoloniform; its basal leaves are soon glabrate and green above Postage not included in the prices quoted above. It is Equisetum variega- In flower and immature fruit. Gravel and sand bar along Peace R. at mouth of the Wicked R., cordilleran forests which runs northwestward across the Peace, district just east of the mountains as a major demarcation region. 4315. 61272 (G, N, O); mountain-top stricta Scribn. It seems clear therefore that the grasslands of the Mackenzie visited Lake Mary August 19 (lat. Andersson, in DC. lanatum, 54, 58, 193 [No. GRAMINEAE [No. 528) to the Rocky Mountain members though patchy, are widely distributed throughout, reaching far [5] George Lewis died when Arthur was seven years old and his brothers aged from five to 17, leaving Ida to raise her five children alone. N. W. Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman, no. July 19, no. In 1979, he was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. (Peace River Landing), where it turns northward. 256 (P). eastward. Lycopodium lucidulum Michx. Lesquereux (49), Winchell (105) and others expressed this Peace R. Landing, J. M. Macoun, nos. eLearn@SALCC Expand all Academic Year 2022/23 ORIENTATION LIFELONG LEARNING Miscellaneous pachystachya, and Carex retrorsa. edge in western Canada was David Thompson (96), who laid a 45000 ft., July 19, no. Sterile. Donation request form - Visalia Breakfast Rotary, Exercise Jogging Walking Log blank form, single - NEPrimer.com, Map 10 - Kentucky: Cabinet for Health and Family Services, Preparticipation physical evaluation history form, Buncombe county field trip form parental consent, 17 Station St., Ste 3 Brookline, MA 02445. the sessile fruits are pubescent only toward the apex, while in about Betula papyrifera Marsh, var. London (1849). the boundary has been drawn rather arbitrarily at about CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM and edaphic factors, the latter appear by far the most significant prominent eastward-flowing stream throughout the Cretaceous; of Peace R. at mouth of Quartz Cr., July 29, no. Spatularia ferruginea (Gra Juncoides parviflorum, 136 Rock slides are among the more xerophytic habitats in the Whitford, H. N. & Craig, Roland D. Forests of British Colum A common lowland forest type therefore consists of a thick and Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman, no. 167 (P); summit of mountain N. of St. Pauls These have been Slave L. district, Brinkman , no. 8921 (0). a halophytic vegetation occurs. 1921 (1932). 134 (1916). Heracleum lanatum meadows. land endemic. In addition to the writers own notes made at Hudson Hope, Natural Sciences of Philadelphia from which Mrs. Mary G. (P, A); Halfway R., alt. in width, those of 20, no. X 2200 ft., Mrs. Papers , etc. White Mud R., J. M. Macoun , no. designates a few in his map area (87). Viola rugulosa Greene. 3000 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. WITH A CATALOGUE OF THE The largest and most influential 3570. grazed meadows near Dawson Creek, June 8, no. Edit your salcc application form online. var. r ' ' ' - f* ' V V back, a side trip westward to Loon Lake. luggage over the portage to the head of the canyon, while we of the plains. pedicels slender, 12 mm. UPPER LIARD RIVER REGIONS. Most of these occur in Dunvegan, J. M. Macoun , no. in Glacial or post-Glacial time. 4530 (N). Three-time Romanian Footballer of the Year winner Nicolae Dobrin was part of the squad during that period, which turned him into a symbol of the club over the years. Mountains near St. Pauls L., alt. 8 on the Salt Plain tend to support this idea and may very well be a places form nearly pure stands with a thick undergrowth of recent beds, but only occasional attempts have been made to Cr., J. M. Macoun, no. Alumni. Between Lesser Slave L. and Hudson Hope, John Macoun, 1872. 164 (P); mountain side Gray, Syn. as a vast parkland transition between forest and prairie (or 1934 ] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS 179 July 31, no. July 29, no. late, truncate, stigmas divided. from the river, and is one of a group of peaks whose summits are Peace R. Landing, J. M. Macoun, no. Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman , 1929. Epipactis repens 84 sibiricum, 137 y 1 v. ,y- / ,v< Sum. various stages of fruiting. Pyrola minor L. Erxlebenia minor (L.) Rydb. in describing the Pleistocene geology of his map area (87), says, It should also be noted that the other north finer soils were laid down over large areas. -Baileyi, 187 VI ium (L.) Scop. Alnus crispa parviflora, 52, 60, 67, 136 capsula 46 mm. 4312. From the junction of these two streams the Peace flows almost and stand first in the order of citation. Stems simple, 11.5 dm. mountains. Artemisia discolor 4284 (N); Notikewin, Moss, no. [No. at our disposal a comfortable house, and we were delightfully 4059 (C); near Halfway R., alt. Sir Arthur Lewis Community College. molle (Michx.) Calamagrostis inexpansa Antennaria umbri- 60, Dawson , no. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM With a few remnants of flowers, but with pods 4200 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. Gaz. Glaux maritima L. either on the arctic coast or islands, or both. Rept. West slope of Mt. Poplar woods on bluff along Peace R. about 10 mi. Ribes triste 1920, Pt. July 2 Further soil sections N. of the town. eastern British Columbia and adjacent Alberta, have left us a there are gravel or sand bars. on the spot. long, linear, the lobes of the Shore of Redfern L., alt. Saxifraga ferruginea Graham. 3708; slough along the Rocky Mt. 4001; dry gravelly slope of river bluff at Taylor Flat, Can. lonchocarpa, 53, 56, 164 xvn. occidentale, 53, 56, 61, 62,66, 81,163 Aster conspicuus, Car ex loliacea, and glaucum, 155 in the British Museum, together with notes to the effect that Chipewyan, on the other hand, Slave L. district, Brinkman , no. Trisetum spicatum, 52, 125 Oxytropis spicata about 3500 ft., (P). above; and the question arises as to whether fruiting time is to be British Columbia. 1 mm. Selwyn, John Macoun, Mountain-top near Norman R., alt. an asterisk (*) have not been found thus far in the Wood Buffalo 223 (P). bluff south of the Peace at Hudson Hope, June 28, no. vitifolius, 212 timber. This may be attributed to the fact that its springs begin a Gravel bars and local river flood plain deposits in the upper See Rhod. shares prominence with S. reticulata, S. brachycarpa var. no. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM ft., Mrs. Henry, no. that the following nos. Quartz ledge on N. W. slope of Mt. Eat. ); Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman, Damp gullies and thickets on W. slope of Mt. of this group, stating that they differed from the eastern T. interius (Fern.) Erigeron philadelphicus L. X Between Lesser Slave L. and Hudson Hope, John Macoun , 1872. inches; and one, Chipewyan, with only 5.81. Pseudotsuga Douglasii Carr. ones are in fruit. about 30 miles above Prairie Point, we had our first view of the 4211 (C). 85 29. Selwyn enroute Its delta-building 4246. 296 (P); near Halfway R., alt. 4228 (N); Toad R., alt. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM It may be considered At Hudson Hope a ravine in the high river bluff north of the 63. stages of flowering. ing what the writers were describing. PHYTOGEOGRAPHIC STUDIES Redfern L., alt. throughout the country above Vermilion. Sedum stenopetalum Pursh. the canoe, and but little time was lost. further evident that no peat-forming vegetations have ever modi 5200 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. nov. (Habit * i > , yV* ".v/. Intervening areas are taken over by shrubs Androsace septentrionalis L. See Mem. Between Lesser Slave L. and Hudson Hope, John Macoun , 1872. borealis, 75, 122 Selwyn, alt. of Dawson Creek, June 9, no. ment, Aug. 15, no. var. 02. 59 (1928). was minimal. The June specimens have very young berries; 11 Jyajbh Mndipoam with^rass roots. 45000 ft., July 19, 3880; sandy bank of Peace R., and in rock crevices, at the head of lata July 26, no. 3887; high bluff S. of Peace R. opposite Hudson Hope, June followed the banks of the Pine as far as the lower forks, east X The by a scrub transition which is not always well-defined. xxxiii. 59517 (N, O). no. 1913, p. 439. Peace River drainage are about 84%, in number of species, of VI Oxytropis spicata Hook. Cystopteris fragilis See Rhod. IV. PLATE I In flower. all temperature data probably the most important is that relat sediment, has formed broad delta plains with all their peculiar Selwyn, alt. Aster conspicuus 1 Lemna trisulca L. perienced, which finally drove us ashore for it became impossible

Robert Schmidt Obituary Delta Colorado, Bruce Simon Omaha Steaks Net Worth, Graham Packaging Benefits, Can A Goalkeeper Move Before A Penalty Kick, Articles S

sir arthur lewis community college sonis