^ TO FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY SIXTH ANNLTAL REPORT. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



This list aims to include only works in which the geography or vegetation 

 of some part of northern Florida is described, and therefore excludes purely 

 geological papers and mere lists of plants, except a few of the latter which deal 

 with some particular small area. Some pertinent titles which were given in the 

 First or Third Annual Report are omitted here to avoid undue repetition, as 

 are most papers in which some general features of the state are described with- 

 out locating them definitely enough to be cited in the foregoing regional descrip- 

 tions. 



The names of authors are arranged alphabetically and the writings of each 

 one chronologically, if there is more than one. 



Adams, J. S. (Commissioner of Immigration). 



Florida : its climate, soil and productions, with a sketch of its history, 

 natural features and social condition A manual of reliable information con- 

 cerning the resources of the state and the inducements which it offers to those 

 seeking new homes. — 8vo. pamphlet, 69 pp., a few illustrations, and folded map. 

 New York, 1870. 



A 64-page pamphlet with very nearly the same title, apparently official or 

 semi-official, but with no author indicated, was published by L. F. Dewey & 

 Co. of Jacksonville in t868. 



Barbour, G. M. 



Florida — for tourists, invalids and settlers; containing practical informa- 

 tion regarding climate, soil, and productions; cities, towns, and people; the 

 culture of the orange and other tropical fruits ; farming and gardening ; scenery 

 and resorts; sport; routes of travel, etc., etc. — -310 pp., 39 figs., folded map. D. 

 Appleton & Co., New York, 1882. 



Bartram, William. 



Travels through North & .South Carolinct, Georgia, East & West Flor- 

 ida, the Cherokee country, the extensive territories of the Muscogulges, or 

 Creek Confederacy, and tli€ country of the Chactaws; containing an account 

 of the soil and natural productions of those regions, together with observa- 

 tions on the manners of the Indians. — 522 pp. and a few plates. T2mo. James 

 & Johnson, Philadelphia, 1791. (Soon afterwards reprinted in London and 

 Dublin, and also translated into French and German.) 



The author's travels in Florida (described on pages 70-254, 303-306, 413-417 

 of the first edition) extended south to what is now Volusia County, and west 

 to the Suwannee River, with a brief visit to Pensacola by way of Mobile. Flis 

 descriptions of the country in Florida seem less accurate than in the case of the 

 other southern states (see 3d Ann. Rep., p. 242), and it is difficult to trace his 

 route in this state with any degree of accuracy. 



Burnett, W. I. (M. D.) 



(Notes on Florida, extracted from a letter to Prof. J. D. Dana.) — .A.m. 

 Jour. Sci. 67:407-412. T854. 



Bush, B. F. 



'Notes on the botanj' of some southern swamps. — Garden & Forest 10:514- 

 516. Dec. 29, 1897. 



Contains a few notes on the river-swamps near Apalachicola. 



