I94 GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION 



New Ascomycetous Fungi. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, 8: 



123-125. 1881. 



Descriptions of thirteen species. 



Peck. New species of Fungi. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, n: 49, 



50. 1884. 



Descriptions of nine species partly from Utah. 



Vermont. 



Much of the early work on Vermont cryptogams was done by 

 C. C. Frost (1805-1880), "the Brattleboro shoemaker," and in 

 1875 he joined Professor Hitchcock of Amherst in the publication 

 of a list of plants growing within thirty miles of Amherst College, 

 the limit being thus taken to include Frost's tramping grounds in the 

 southeast corner of Vermont. Many of the plants of that list, par- 

 ticularly the cryptogams, belong to Vermont instead of Massachu- 

 setts, tho most are doubtless common to both states. Frost's col- 

 lection, presented to the Brattleboro library, is not accessible at 

 present. Latterly a large amount of work on Vermont fungi has 

 been done by Professor Burt, and Professor L. R. Jones has re- 

 cently organized a systematic survey to investigate the cryptogamic 

 flora of the state. The following papers pertain to the local flora: 



Burt. A List of the Vermont Helvelleae with descriptive Notes. 

 Rhodora, i: 59-67. PI. 4. 1899. 



Frost. Further Enumeration of New England Fungi. Proc. 

 Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. 12: 77-81. 1869. 



A continuation of Sprague's list giving 263 species. (See under 

 Massachusetts.) 



- Catalogue of Boleti of New England, with Descriptions 

 of new Species. Bull. Buffalo Soc. Nat. Hist. 2: 100-105. 1874. 



Jones & Orton. A partial List of the parasitic Fungi of Ver- 

 mont. Rep. Vt. Agric. Exper. Sta, n: 201-219. 1898. 

 List of 139 Vermont species. 



Peck. New Species of Fungi. Bot. Gaz. 5: 33-36. 1880. 

 Includes ten species from Vermont. 



Virginia. 



Except some collections made in the vicinity of Washington by 

 the mycologists of the Division of Vegetable Pathology and some 



