1907] Fernald,— Soil Preferences of Alpine Plants 165 
1 Summits, and shores of high ponds, Adirondack Mts., New York. 
? Summits, and shores of high ponds, higher Green Mts. (Mansfield, Camel's Hump, 
etc.), Vermont. 
3 Summit areas and ravines of the higher White Mts. (Washington, altitude 6300 feet 
— 1922 meters,— Lafayette, etc.), and shores of high ponds in the White Mts, New 
Hampshire. 
1 Mt. Katahdin, altitude 5270 feet (1623 meters), the highest point in Maine. For 
detailed account of flora see Ruopora, iii, 147-184 (1901). 
5 Lesser mountains (Baldpate, Saddleback, Abraham, Bigelow, etc.), of western and 
central Maine, For account of flora of Mt. Abraham see C. H. Knowlton, RHODORA, 
i. 191-193 (1899); of Mt. Saddleback see C. H. Knowlton, RHODORA, V. 35-38 (1903). 
9 Mt. Desert Island and adjacent islands and mainland coast, eastern Maine. See 
Rand & Redfield, Flora of Mt. Desert I., Me. (1894). 
7 Tableland area of Table-top Mt., a high tableland, extreme altitude 4250 feet (1296 
meters), extending 15 miles or more north and south, in the western part of Gaspé Co., 
Quebec. Separated on the west from the Shickshock Mts. by the River Ste. Anne des 
Monts. 
8 Northern slopes and crests of Mt. Albert, a high tableland, extreme altitude 3900 
feet (1195 meters), west of the River Ste. Anne des Monts, and forming the eastern end 
of the Shickshock Mt. range, in Gaspé Co., Quebec. For list of plants see John 
Macoun, Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. i, sec. 4, 127-136 (1883). 
? Smuggler's Notch, a narrow pass shut in by cliff-walls of Mt. Mansfield and Sterling 
Mt., in northern Vermont. For detailed accounts see C. G. Pringle, Am. Nat. x. 
741—743 (1876); H. W. Preston, Am. Nat. xvi. 901-905 (1882); W. W. Eggleston, Bot, 
Gaz. xx. 72-75 (1895); A. J. Grout, Plant. World, ii. 116-118 (1899) and Torreya, ii. 
46—48 (1902). : 
10 Cliffs and slides on the southwest side of Willoughby Mt., Orleans Co., Vermont. For 
detailed account see G. G. Kennedy, RHODORA, vi. 93-134 (1904). 
11 Cliffs and ledges of the St. John River and its tributaries, northern Maine and New 
Brunswick. 
Cliffs and ledges of the Restigouche River, New Brunswick and Quebec. For 
account see G. U. Hay, Bull. Nat. Hist. Soc. N. B. xiv. 12-35 (1890). 
13 Cliffs and ledges of Little Cascapedia, Bonaventure, Grand, Ste. Anne des Monts, 
and other rivers of Gaspé and Bonaventure Counties, Quebec, For account of the flora 
of River Ste. Anne des Monts see John Macoun, l. c. 
^ Many cliffs and headlands (conglomerate) of Bic and adjoining towns, Rimouski 
Co., Quebec. 
15 Sea-cliffs and mountains from Matane River to Cape Marsouin, and at other points 
on the northern coast of Gaspé Co., Quebec; also Percé, Gaspé Co., Quebec. See 
Macoun, l. c. 
16 Narrow east and west abutments, northwest of the great tableland of Table-top Mt., 
Gaspé Co., Quebec, (See 7). 
17 Tableland and exposed cafion-walls, Mt. Albert, Gaspé Co., Quebec. (See 8). 
