43 
Contributions towards a List of the State and Local Floras of the 
United States. 
MINNESOTA.* 
A Catalogue of Plants collected in the North-western Territory 
by Thomas Say in the year 1823. By Lewis De Schweinitz. (C.) 
In Keating's Narrative of Long's Exped. to source of St. Peter's 
River, Vol. ii., London, 1825. 
Botany of the North-eastern Geological District of Minnesota. By 
Thomas Clark. 
In Rep. of State Geologist for 1865. 
A Catalogue of the Plants of Minnesota. By I. A. Lapham. 
_ In Rep. of State Hoticult. Soc, St. Paul, 1875. 
List of the Ferns of Minnesota. By W. H, Lemard, M.D. 
In Bull. Minn. Acad. Sci. Minneapolis, 1877. 
The Mycological Flora of Minnesota. By A. E. Johnson, M.D. (C.) 
In Bull. Minn Acad. Nat. Sci. Minneapolis, 1877 and 1878. 
(Additions in same, 1879.) 
The plants of the North Shore of Lake Superior. By B. Juni. (C) 
In Ann. Rep. Geolog. Survey for 1S78. 
Plants of the north shore of Lake Superior. By S. C. Roberts. (B.) 
_ In 8th Ann. Rep. Geol. Survey Minn. Minneapolis, 1879. 
List of Trees, Shrubs and herbaceous Plants identified by 0. E. Gar- 
rison in the region of the head-waters of the Crow-Wing River, 
the White Earth Reservation, Itasca Lake, and the Upper Mis- 
sissippi. 
In Ann. Rep. Geolog. Survey for 1880. 
The wild Flowers of Lake Pepin Valley. By Miss Sara Manning. 
In Ann. Rep. Minn. Horticult. Society for 1884. 
Fillmore County. 
The Trees and Shrubs of Fillmore County. By N. H. Winchell. 
In Ann. Rep. Geolog. Survey Minn, for 1875. 
Freeborn County. 
List of Trees and Shrubs of Freeborn County. By N. H. Win- 
chell. (A.) 
In 3rd Ann. Rep. Geol. Survey. St. Paul, 1875. 
nennepin and Houston Counties. 
List of Shrubs and Trees. By N. H. Winchell. 
In Ann. Rep. Geolog. Survey for 1876. 
Mower County. 
List of Trees and Shrubs of Mower County. ByN. H. Winchell. (A.) 
In 3rd Ann. Rep. Geol. Survey. St. Paul, 1875. 
See also Wisconsin, p. 131, Vol. x. A Flora of Minnesota, to be published 
as a report of the Geological and Natural History Survey next autumn, will in- 
clude not only the observations of' the State Geologist and his assistants, but also 
hose of earlier botanic collectors and explorers, enumerating all the species that are 
known to have been found in Minnesota by all observers up to the present time 
about 1,550 species of phKnogams and vascular cryptogram^ of which 126 are in- 
educed species; about loo are western and northern plants not described in 
»«|fd. In the case of rare or local species, the localities and names of observers 
wiU be mentioned.— Warken Upham. 
