DurRING THE SUMMER OF IQOI 295 
1283). Two days later we went up to Dalton, from which point 
we made only one excursion before leaving the state, collecting 
numbers 1284-1292 on the Oostanaula Shale about two miles 
east of the city. 
The number of days which I spent in Georgia in Ig01 was 
the same as in the previous year, and although not so many 
specimens were collected, more was accomplished in other ways. 
My travels by rail within the state covered about 1,380 miles, and 
as about 98 per cent. of this distance was traversed in the day- 
time, I was able to make observations on the flora of nearly every 
mile traversed. I collected in twenty-four counties, and made 
notes on the flora of seventeen others. Over 100 photographs 
illustrating my observations were taken. 
Among the noteworthy results of my trip may be mentioned 
the re-discovery of E/lottia racemosa,* the finding of inexhaustible 
quantities of /soetes in the coastal plain of Georgia, where none 
had been known to exist before, and the exploration of the sand- 
hills of southeast Georgia, the Cretaceous region, the Slough, 
Forest Falls, the ponds of Decatur County, and the Pine 
Mountains. 3 
Dr. Mohr’s “ Plant Life of Alabama,” which appeared during 
the summer, was a great help to me in several ways, giving me 
an opportunity to compare the floral conditions in Georgia with 
those of the corresponding portions of Alabama; and it was a 
source of considerable satisfaction to note how nearly his treat- 
ment coincided with that which I had already planned for 
Georgia. 
Some of the undescribed or otherwise noteworthy plants col- 
lected on this trip will be discussed in the concluding portion of 
this paper. 
COLLEGE PoInT, N. Y. 
*See Plant World, 5: 87-90. f/. 72, My 1902; also Sargent, Silva N. Am. 14: 
31. 1902. 
