ic)4 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, 11: 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 A^ermont. 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. Thefollowing papers pertain to the local flora: 



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

 Rhodora, i: 59-67. PL 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. 11: 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 



