Coniston Old Man has no connecting ridges other than that to Brim Fell, but a discernible rib falls due east via Stubthwaite Crag and Crowberry Haws.
22.
Evolutionary biologists have explained the striking geographic distribution of crowberries as a result of long-distance migratory birds dispersing seeds from one pole to the other.
23.
Instead of trees, the islands are covered with a luxuriant, dense growth of herbage and shrubs, including crowberry, bluejoint, Aleutian shield fern.
24.
On higher ground, to the west, dwarf shrubs such as cloudberry, " Rubus chamaemorus ", and crowberry, " Empetrum nigrum ", are more frequent.
25.
The trail we were following _ a bridle path, according to the topographic map _ had been largely effaced by moss, crowberry and the waist-high birch brush that Icelanders optimistically call skogar, or woods.
26.
The tundra, a carpet of blueberries, crowberries, dwarf birches and wildflowers over a layer of permafrost, is spongy and difficult to walk on even when rain has not dotted it with knee-deep puddles.
27.
The Northern Urals are dominated by conifers, namely Siberian fir, Siberian pine, Scots pine, Siberian spruce, Norway spruce and Siberian larch, as well as by black crowberry, etc . ) are abundant.
28.
Other recorded old English common names include arberry, bear's grape, crowberry, foxberry, hog cranberry, kinnikinnick, mealberry, mountain box, mountain cranberry, mountain tobacco, sandberry, upland cranberry, and uva-ursi.
29.
They were also diving to feed on blue mussels and other underwater food sources like the green sea urchin . 24 % had eaten moss recently, 19 % had consumed grass, 34 % had eaten black crowberry and about half had consumed willows.
30.
Only the most resiliant plants thrive; such as dwarf azaleas, crowberry, the blue heath ( Phyllodoce caerulea ), the moss bell heather ( Harrimanella hypnoides ), the pincushion plant ( Diapensia lapponica ) and glacier buttercup ( Ranunculus glacialis ).