10 CONTRIBUTIONS TO NORTH AMERICAN ICHTHYOLOGY III. 



VI.— TENNESSEE BASIN. 



A. — Tipper Course. 



1. Clinch Eivcr. tributaries iu Southwestern Virginia. (Cope, 18C8.) 



2. Powell's River, near Cumberland Gap. (Clear.) 



3. Indian Creek, near Cumberland Gap. (Clear.) 



4. Station Creek, near Cumberland Gap. (Clear.) 



5. Holstou River, various tributaries in Southwestern Virginia. 



(Cope, 18GS.) 

 G. French Broad River, at Newport, Tenn. (Rather deep and muddy.) 



7. French Broad River, about Warm Springs, N. C, Asheville, N. C, 



and elsewhere.) (Cope, 1809.) (Rapid, rocky, and generally 

 clear.) 



8. Big Pigeon River, at Cliffton, Tenn. (Rather clear.) 



9. Swannanoa River, at foor of Black Mountain. (Clear, cold mount- 



ain stream, with trout.) 



B. — Lower Course. 



10. Chickamauga River, at Ringgold, Ga. (Rather clear and very 



rocky.) 



11. Tributaries of Tennessee River, about Huntsvilie, Ala. (Agassiz; 



Newman's collection, 1853.) 



12. Tributaries of Tennessee River, about Florence, Ala. (Storer, 1845.) 



13. Elk River and tributaries, at Estill Springs, Tenn. (Clear, rocky, 



and cold.) 



VII. — CUMBERLAND BASIN. 



1. Round-Stone River, Rock Castle County, Kentucky. (Clear.) 



2. Rock Castle River, Livingston, Ky. (Clear and rocky.) 



3. Big Laurel River, Laurel County, Kentucky. ^Clear.) 



4. Cumberland River, about Pineville, Ky. (Clear, rocky.) 



5. Yellow Creek, near Cumberland Gap. (Rather muddy.) 



6. South Fork of Cumberland River, iu Tennessee. (Cope, 1809.) 



7. Cumberland River and tributaries, near Nashville. (Winchell, 1876.) 



8. Stone River, Murfreesboro', Tenn. (Clear and rocky.) 



It will be noticed that almost without exception the above mentioned 

 localities are in the mountainous or upland parts of the different water- 

 basins. Of the fishes inhabiting distinctively the lowland courses of 

 most of the streams, little is yet definitely known. 



