1901 | Day, — Herbaria of New England. 281 
much forked, the simple terminal divisions 0.5 to 4 (average 2) 
cm. long: peduncles 3.5 to ro (average 6.8) cm. long, with 1 to 6 
(usually 4) strobiles. — Lycopodium digitatum foliis Arboris Vitae, 
spicis bigemellis teretibus, Dill. Hist. Musc. 448, t. 59. Z. complana- 
tum, L.l. c. (as to pl. Dill.), American authors and European authors, 
in part; Lloyd, Bull. Torr. Club, xxvi. 565; Lloyd & Underw. l. c. — 
MAINE, Island Falls, Sept. 26, 1901, Dover, July 17, 1896 (M. ZL. 
Fernald); Beech Hill, Mt. Desert Island, July 27, 1899 (2. Z 
Williams ): New HaMrsHIRE, Jaffrey, July 9, 1897 (B. L. Robinson, 
no. 187): VERMONT, Manchester, July 16, 1898 (M. A. Day, no. 
219): MassacHusETTS, Mt. Wachusett, Sept. 1896 (W. W. Bailey); 
Concord, Sept. 3o, 1879 (W. P. Rich); North Reading, Sept. 4, 
1882 (C. E. Perkins); Malden, Aug. 1878 (Æ. A. Young); Blue 
Hills Reservation, Sept. 11, 1898 (F. G. Floyd); Douglass, Oct. 
25, 1893 ( F. F. Collins): CONNECTICUT, Southington, Sept. 18, 1898 
(L. Andrews, no. 494); reported from Nova Scotia to Ontario, 
Minnesota, and West Virginia. 
GRAY HERBARIUM. 
THE HERBARIA OF NEW ENGLAND. 
Manv A. Dav. 
(Continued from page 262.) 
Seymour, Arthur Bliss, WAVERLY, MassACHUSETTS.— The 
phaenogams in Mr. Seymour's herbarium are kept at his home in 
Waverly and number about 3500 specimens, including nearly 2500 
species with a geographical range covering nearly all the United 
States. The cryptogams in this collection number about 3500 spe- 
cies and are deposited in the rooms of the Cambridge Botanical Sup- 
ply Company. The group of Fungi is best represented, being spe- 
cially strong in the Uredineae, Ustilagineae, and Erysipheae, including 
specimens from different parts of the United States, Europe, Japan, 
and South Africa. 
Smith College, NORTHAMPTON, MassACHUSETTS.— In the her- 
barium at Smith College are about 6600 sheets nearly half of which 
are cryptogams. The cryptogamic part consists largely of purchased 
