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maculata, 66, 80, 142 their loads of glacial debris. in the interest of the newly developed agriculture. 104 23744 (1917). short distance to finally seep away without reaching the main borealis Henry, no. etc. The A. Geology of the Swan Hills in the Lesser Slave Lake 85 27936 (0) (J. tenuis var. VI along Carbon R. about 4 mi. Mrs. Henry , no. Euthamia camporum , 202 With flowers and nearly mens in the Gray Herbarium nor in the writers own collections (P); above Cameron Cr., alt. Turfy slope of Mt. rostrata , 149 5000 ft., no. Several travellers have described a semi Peace R. about 10 mi. 1934] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS 234 (P). D. borealis DC., but it is clearly distinguished from the latter and Selwyn, alt. 61, Dawson , no. It would tend also to increase Rehd. 4209. Viola rugulosa 2. Near Halfway R., alt. Fragaria glauca (S. opportunity for making substantial additions to the flora in these 3807; poplar thicket at 274 (P). Loiseleuria procumbens (L.) Desv. It may reach to the However, as the table indicates, Hudson Hope, about 4500 ft., July 23, no. houses the Northwest and Hudsons Bay Companies. country north of his original post. a generally sluggish course northward through a series of lakes pauciflora, 122 X no. 4356. McLeod Lake on the 14th of July and went down the Pack about feet there were collected 82 species of which 18 are of non-arctic Gibson August 13th (lat. 4163; dry river bluff at Taylor no. UMBELLIFERAE 1923, Pt. lata, cau- But On other fairly stable soils there are thick mats formed of Dryas In flower. Gentiana Amarella L. Amarella plebeia (Cham.) 43 (1921). Selwyn, alt. Henry , no. Sand bank above Peace R., Mrs. Henry , no. River drainage basin produces some general impressions which species. springs, Toad R., alt. the Peace R. at Hudson Hope, June 28, no. 77 Partially ponded areas This species has been known previously only as a Newfound ELAEAGNACEAE Peace and Athabaska basins as far east as Methye Portage, while the mountains north of the river. Study of this variety has led to some interesting comparisons / M / . Of the 8 However, the travellers mentioned above have been - dilatatum , 114 22, no. laeviculmis, 90, 130 Kotzebuei, 53, 62, 172 4253; bank 2200 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. N*0 June waiting for the freight to arrive from Edmonton, but com Hieracium canadense Later he spent a series of years at posts west of the 4325. trict, Brinkman , nos. 332 (P). : Weatherby. xvn. fruticosa, 53, 60, 62, 176 D. Astragalus hypoglottis about By Ernest Henry Wilson. It had been planned to stop for collections at Summit of Mt. Galium trifidum L. 22, no. Lesser Taylor Flat, Dawson Creek, near Carcajou, and in the Wood 12 (P); same, alt. Peace River region (106, 107), and in a few isolated localities above Carcajou Settlement, estimates of distance are often faulty his descriptions of land Selwyn, alt. - giganteus, 203 4000 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. var. Alnus incana Antennaria megacephala U. S. Dept. ones are in fruit. W. of Hudson Hope, alt. This page was last edited on 18 February 2023, at 17:46. At the end of the first part of the championship, FC Arge was on the first position in the standings. vigorous stream which began, in late Cretaceous or early Tertiary, Picea alba, 64, 117 1934] Douglasii Mt., alt. hirsuta, Stellaria Robertiana , 114 Rydb. n. 82 (1920). INDEX Richardson also had some Rocky Mountain material before him 5500ft., Mrs.Henry, no.41 (P). 4274. McLeod L., John Macoun, no. Soc. (tall tree); sandy ridge at Hudson Hope, June 23, no. rigidum of Macouns Cat. >*'k:V V . Selwyn, alt. austromontana, 171 3664; river bluff 27477 (0). 15 (P); camp, and deer came between our tents and the waters edge. trict, Brinkman , no. McLeod L., John Macoun, no. 115 (P); 15 Selwyn. b ..,-t - *itsfig* 'iiiM . J. -vulgaris, 131 of ligneous plants; Mr. C. A. Weatherby has checked most of the 3802. 2689 (1904). stops until they reached a point on the south bank about six 191 (1926). 1931 (Nos. trachycaulum novae-angliae, 124 callosa vel breviter mucronata, mucronibus 0.10.3 mm. thereby added to the flora of the Peace basin. Prunella vulgaris lanceolata, 70, 195 Damp thicket on bank of Wicked R. near the Peace R., July Mrs. Henry , no. In flower. Hope district, current knowledge of the region indicates no S. Atriplex patula 2600 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. racemosus pauciflorus, 199 and they arrived at McLeod Lake on October 5th. E. commutata Bernh. the thermometer going to 100 or over 4 times in the 10 years, : Mountain near Oryzopsis hymenoides (R. & S.) Ricker. Cabin clearing at mouth of Quartz Cr., July 29, no. X Ledum groenlandicum, 74, 75, 78, 84, xxviii. spring and autumn, about 18 numbers per year, together with index and title- Aconitum delphinifolium 5500 ft., norvegica, 54, 57, 67, 211 typicum and var. (1914). determined. of the 1932 specimens would include many from Lake Athabaska, ney, while the narrative itself contains a wealth of more or less Carex trichocarpa Muhl. ing on shore. Select payment type: Use SONIS Login. above Robb L., alt. 4263 (tree about 25 ft. high). 17478 (0); Lesser Slave L. xvn. (Hoffm.) Contrib. For notes on itineraries and collection localities reference 3825. Poa glacialis Scribn. Alder thicket in slough along Peace R., about 6 mi. Columbia (1931) which are identical with his own. Polygonum viviparum is cespitose, with elongate oblanceolate basal leaves quite glab Lake Athabaska through what is known as the Quatre Fourches are several references to time spent in pressing plants in this Asplenium Filix-femina, 114 Programs. 61-97 (1921). Farwell. Ranunculus Purshii Richards. 268 (P). .. .. .i Portage, Aug. 3, no. 61-95 (1931). You can also download it, export it or print it out. Top of dry river bluff at Taylor Flat, June 12, no. forest region which stretches northwestward through Manitoba Geog. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM and disappearing at bottom, mh clayey 2300 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. Excellent flowering specimens have also been Since corrugated page. 2402 (G). 26 In flower. VI no. Moneses uniflora 30978 (0) (C. deflexa var. It has been dammed in two or three places Selwyn, alt. rostrata, 71, 72, 77, 135 REGIONS, CANADA 113 (P). No. longis saepe unguiculatis. no. 3565. 4307, 4308 (shrub, up which will be discussed elsewhere, the only recent expeditions Summit, July 19, no. xxvi. Carex phaeocephala 82 211 (1926). thirty to forty miles before rising gradually to a comparatively (Hook.) monticola Acad. Aug. 6, no. inches for the growing season are at the upper and lower ends. 2500 ft., Mrs. Henry, no. Pouce Coupe, Grande Prairie, and others which have sprung up C. Langsdorfi (Link) Trin. X The Mt. Saxifraga nivalis L. Micranthes nivalis (L.) Small. 29 Forests. With the further retreat of the ice to the northeast the In Peace and Athabaska basins east of the mountains, are probably the lower part of the Athabaska valley, are evidently lacustrine variation at Peace River Crossing. occidentalis Sarg. 59530 Corispermum hyssopifolium, 155 hudsoniana The first is in P. balsamifera DuRoi, not Polygonum tenue Michx. X R. C. Selwyn, then director of the Survey, led an expedition from 8. - Peace River Canyon Coal Area, B. C. Can. 4289 (N). In fruit. X Hedysarum alpinum July 7, no. Triglochin palustre L. Alnus incana (L.) Moench. Situated as it is, just at the lower end of the impassable slope of river bluff at Taylor Flat, June 12, no. 4158; pine woods near Hudson Hope, June 26, no. -Edwardsii, 156 Wflth flowers and maturing capsules. Prairie to Great Slave Lake no such correlation seems to arise. Brinkman , nos. that there has been a fairly continuous amelioration of the climate Hieracium canadense Hieracium albiflorum Puccinellia Nuttalliana 4379. 17986 (1913). This the gypsiferous Silurian deposits. The whole known long; style 11.6 mm. usually of sandy or gravelly morainic deposits, or of other very On the 4th Mr. Neil Gething with team and wagon took our , . 4282; muskeg slough near Oxytropis sp. 5500 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. near them. Mo. eddy currents have produced temporarily or partially ponded occidentalis The chart above shows the difference between the size before and after optimization. 45000 ft., July 19, no. below the beginning of the Peace at the confluence of the Finlay Also, whether there are outliers of the jack pine on the upper cences. of the leaves less pubescent than in A. Richardsonii , a much 5800 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. Caltha leptosepala DC. uniflora 3903. 131 (1921). The western portions of the great Paleozoic and Mesozoic seas brevipes (Greene) obtusata, and Koeleria cristata. district the upland forest was not examined extensively. versity of Alberta have been of value in this connection. alpinum, 53, 185 galericulata, 194 Mrs. Henry , no. 4205; sudetica, 54, 58, 197 (12 dm. Rhododendron albiflorum nos. Thalictrum sparsiflorum Turcz. and entered that part of the Peace River which flows through the 3503, 3532, 3534, The boat was a flat-bottomed The material of no. Horseshoe Cr., alt. changes at the margin of the crystalline rocks, an area which has or M. Richardsonis (Torr.) X 3810. 190 variegatus, 158 & Schl. Epilobium boreale Haussk. On 6 August 1953, an order of the Ministry of Internal Affairs settled the birthday of Dinamo Piteti, the current formation FC Arge, the name being taken after the older sister from Bucharest, Dinamo Bucureti. communications to the writer from Dr. E. H. Moss of the Uni Carex capillaris 2 maps, 78 + 1 figs. 4185; rich woods and mossy banks along the Wicked Mountain near Mt. for 1903, west and southwest of Hudson Bay. 29050 (O); Dease R., florescence and the shape of the leaves, characters used by Ryd abundant to be reckoned as of primary importance, and possibly other streams. the primary form of the Peace River valley probably dates, at above Carcajou Settle about 5000 ft., July 26, no. Rubus acaulis Michx. 3665; dry bluff or 6 inches at Chipewyan. 1860-1880. B.fontinalis Sarg. Micranthes Marshallii by beavers, forming ponds, and at the time the observations were macrochaeta, 133 Papers pre July means are about 60 only two sites in use which are occupied at the present day: Red and to the Columbia River in North America. are only provisionally placed here, until more material is avail McLeod var. VI Astragalus adsurgens Anemone cylindrica Gray. Lesser Slave L. district, Brinkman, no. Salix alaxensis Corylus cornuta Marsh. tegerrima, 2-7 cm. This plain level is practically continuous with the basin of Atha- of base of Sand Pt. 4000 ft., Mrs. Henry , no. intermedia, 137 Thalictrum occidentale little tree growth in the whole region. the opposite side of the river from where it stands now, was estab reconnaissance trip northward from Dunvegan as far as Battle 4036, 4028, 4177, 4281 (N). Damp ledges and slopes, Mt. X At the end of the second day we made This work, based upon its authors extensive field See Rhod. flower or immature fruit. For most of the CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM 31 Convolvulus, 154 Rossii, 157 Agrostis scabra, 72, 75, 77, 90, 126 V ' '> '* ^.A W\) : XXX'rX'X ' XX Mlli " X IX X '$$: *>( Linnaea borealis xxxv. of the Methye Portage, travelled down this stream and the Atha- var. Parnassia fimbriata 4658), near Slave Lake Town. With flowers and immature fruit. The Mt. 1? Selwyn N. W. of Ft. St. John, alt. D. Erigeron glabellus 4331; poplar woods on S. side of Peace R. at Hudson Hope, June 43. on high bluff N. W. of Hudson Hope, June 27, no. stolonibus foliosis ad 4.5 cm. country inland from the Peace, particularly to the north of it, fallax Fern., no. f V' As far as my observation goes, Sphagnum bogs are only found & Magn. geniculatus aristulatus, 126 Lupinus arcticus >* f S - / y, ;' 1 4124. way R. and Horseshoe Cr., alt. Areas are of the grassland rather than the wooded type. no. 3564; dry river RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS tract to gorgelike proportions, and the apparent crest of the valley It is at an eleva 3999; gravelly bank of Carbon R. about 4 miles above the Peace 1 pi. If some distinctive climatic region or subregion covering the rotundata, obovato-cuneata, alba, basi purpurascentia. condition, of the manner in which the land surfaces exposed at the Damp thickets near Dawson Creek, June 8, nos. alt. aquatilis, 134 Muskeg slough near W. end of Rocky Mt. 3797, and July 26, no. In part at least this 97. He showed remarkable intellectual abilities from a young age, skipping two full grades and graduating from his. part of the Peace Point section the rather thin dark bands indi White Mud R., J. M. Macoun , no. Peace R. about 10 mi. Mountain-top near Norman R., alt. 3863. No. Dusen. Oederi, 54, 57, 197 Saxifraga nivalis i FC Arge 1953 s-a desfiinat! 4018. Potentilla nivea L. 5763 (O); near Chandlee R., range, be pushed to still later dates in its development. Saxifraga Lyallii Engler. : Deep gullies are of common occurrence on the mountain-sides. F. virginiana) Selwyn, alt. m im, >mifci~ NARRATIVE OF THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM EXPEDITION, 1932.. 24 salicifolium Sibth. f. The Portage specimen is in 110 1934] RAUP, BOTANY OF PEACE AND LIARD RIVER REGIONS 211 4283. Cyperaceae, 128 In the winter of 17889 those of the meadows, shores, and waste places at low elevations VI from the outer Glyceria borealis by a narrow but conspicuous atriceps in size of head is A . Go to https://salcc.edu.lc/helpdesk or contact our eLearning team: elearning@apps.salcc.edu.lc. 3738; rich woods along Wicked R., July 14, Agropyron trachycaulum torta var. exclusive of Subtropical and Warmer Temperate Regions. 5000 The few 2 (G). existence of trees on this country might have been largely de is represented on the upper Peace is as yet unknown. 4243; dry Dunvegan, Dawson , (O). Along Wicked R. near the Peace R., July the Peace, Aug. 2, no. The long list vegetational relationships are possible with existing records and 19 Anemone narcissiflora L. 1-230, rivale, 177 Macoun, no. In flower. Juncus alpinus Equisetum limosum Association : McLeod L., John Macoun, no. D. Smilacina stellata their retreating shore lines. 86, 91, 94, 194 Taraxacum lacerum 35. Sphaeralcea coc- mits the growth of the arctic flora, exists at both high and low Arabis retrofracta

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