TKMNKSSKF. FLORA, '^ • 



Clitoria Mariana L. Mai-uin .»f tl.icki-ts and in barrens. 

 Juue-July. 



Ceuti'oseiiia Virgilliana Benth. Dry, open glades and barrens. 

 June-Sept ember. 



Aiiiphicarpa'a iiionoica Xutt. Rieh, damp woodlands. Au- 



giist-Soptembi'i'. 



Galactia mollis Miehx. Common in all glades and barrens. 

 Ma V— Se j > t e m b e r . 



(i. pilosa Elliott. White bluff, Dickson Co. Not rare. July. 



Baptisia australis II. Br. Cedar glades at Lavergne. June- 

 July. 



B. alba R.Br. Cameron hill, Chattanooga; Mts. of East 

 Temi.; Duektown. June-July. 



B. tinctoria R. Bv. Mts. of East Teiin. Lookout Mt. July. 



Thennopsis fraxinifoUa M. A. Curtis. Region of copper 

 mines, East Tenn. May-June. 



* Th. Carolilliaiia M. A. Curtis. Mountains along Ocoe river, 

 East Tenn., aud also frequent on summit of Harpeth ridge and 

 Paradise ridge. May. 



Cladi-astis tinctoria Raf Hills south of Nashville. Tree* 

 attaining three feet diameter, but never otherwise than hollow. 

 May-June. 



Oercis Canadensis L. Rich hillsides. March-April. 



Cassia Marylandica L. Bottom lands and fence-rows. duly- 

 August. 



C. Tora L. River bottoms, low marshy grounds. July. 



C. Cha^nijvcrista C. Sunny exposures in sandy soil. Jnly- 

 Au trust. 



* Thermopsis Camliniana M. Curtis, is a striking instance of distribu- 

 tion of species in widelv distant colonies. I tirst noticed the plant in tne 

 central range of the BigFrog Mts.,near the copper mines at Duektown ii.ast 

 Tenn . in 1860, in soils derived from quartzites and black roohn^ slates 

 in numbers, but not generaUv disseminated over the region Again 1 

 came upon it, in 1870, on the top of the ridges which encircle Nashville. 

 These ridges are capped with siliceous cherts, which rest on the black 

 Devonian shale. 



