Mount Rainier - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Mount Rainier Part 29 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
A small species of pearlwort, doubtfully referred here, occurs rarely along rivulets in Paradise Park.
=Cerastium arvense= Linnaeus.
Goat Mountains, Allen, No. 237.
=Arenaria capillaris= Poiret.
Common on the rocks at 5,000 to 7,000 feet elevation. The form with curved leaves, variety _nardifolia_ Regel, is more frequent than the type.
=Arenaria verna= Linnaeus.
Rather rare in the pumice on the east side of the mountain.
=Arenaria macrophylla= Hooker.
In dry woods at low alt.i.tudes.
=PORTULACACEAE.= (Purslane Family.)
=Spraguea multiceps= Howell.
A handsome plant, with entire spatulate leaves and dense heads of pink or purple flowers. Common in the pumice fields.
=Claytonia sibirica= Linnaeus.
Collected by Flett somewhere near the base of the mountain. The commonest lowland "spring beauty."
=Claytonia asarifolia= Bongard.
A plant with fleshy entire leaves and small racemes of white flowers.
Occasional along the rivulets at 4,000 to 5,000 feet elevation.
=Claytonia parvifolia= Mocino.
On the rocks at 3,000 to 4,000 feet alt.i.tude.
=Claytonia lanceolata= Pursh.
Common in the gra.s.sy meadows. The tuberous root is edible.
=Lewisia columbiana= (Howell) Robinson.
Goat Mountains, Allen. Leaves fleshy, flowers rose-purple, showy.
=POLYGONACEAE.= (Buckwheat Family.)
=Oxyria digyna= (Linnaeus) Hill.
A small plant with reniform entire leaves, and flowers and fruit like those of the common docks. Not rare in rock crevices at 5,000 to 6,000 feet elevation.
=Polygonum minimum= Watson.
Common at 5,000 to 6,000 feet alt.i.tude.
=Polygonum douglasii= Greene.
On a gravelly slope near the foot of Cowlitz Glacier.
=Polygonum newberryi= Small.
Common in the pumice fields, where it is a characteristic plant.
=Polygonum bistortoides= Pursh.
Very plentiful on the gra.s.sy slopes, where it is conspicuous by its dense white-flowered spikes an inch long, borne singly on slender stems a foot or two high.
=Eriogonum compositum= Douglas.
A form of this variable species occurs on the talus at the foot of the cliffs on the north side of Cowlitz Glacier.
=Eriogonum pyrolaefolium coryphaeum= Torrey & Gray.
Plentiful in the pumice fields.
=BETULACEAE.= (Birch Family.)
=Alnus sinuata= (Regel) Rydberg.
Sitka alder. A small alder, seldom over ten or twelve feet high.
Common along the streams at low alt.i.tude.
=SALICACEAE.= (Willow Family.)
=Salix scouleriana= Barratt.
The common upland willow; not rare up to 3,500 feet elevation.
=Salix sitchensis= Sanson.
The "silky willow" is plentiful along the Nisqually at Longmire Springs.
=Salix barclayi= Anderson.
=Salix commutata= Bebb.