Wild Flowers of NewfoundlandPublished privately by A. M. Ayre, 1935 - Botany |
Common terms and phrases
Alaska ALPINE Amer annual Arctic Asia banks base beneath branches bright Britain broad catkins clusters Common Creeping CROWFOOT cultivated dark green dense eight inches Erect Europe Family feet Fernald fields five Fleshy foot forming four fruit gardens Greek green greenish Greenland Habenaria hairs Hairy half inches Introduced July Labrador Large Larger Latin leaf leaflets less Limestone long stalks Lower leaves Marsh MEADOW Michx MOUNTAIN narrow leaves Naturalised nearly Newfoundland Nfld Nfld.-August Nfld.-July Nfld.-June NORTHERN pale Perennial petals pink places plant pods pointed Polygonum Potentilla purple purplish Pursh raceme Ranunculus Rare Resembling Rhodora root Rosa Rose round Rubus Rydb Salix sepals shining short showy Shrub six inches slender Small Small white smaller Smooth sometimes species stalks stem Stout Tall thick three feet three inches three-quarters inch Tiny tree turned upright usually WATER white flowers WILD WILLOW woods yellow flowers young