﻿296 
  

  

  / 
  

  

  Harper: 
  A 
  week 
  in 
  eastern 
  Texas 
  

  

  be 
  found 
  at 
  isolated 
  stations 
  farther 
  east 
  (though 
  I 
  have 
  looked 
  in 
  

   vain 
  In 
  the 
  botanical 
  literature 
  for 
  any 
  definite 
  information 
  on 
  

   that 
  point), 
  but 
  for 
  all 
  pract'cal 
  purposes 
  the 
  ranges 
  of 
  many 
  

   must 
  terminate 
  right 
  there. 
  

  

  There 
  is 
  one 
  plant 
  of 
  that 
  neighborhood 
  which 
  deserves 
  special 
  

   mention 
  here, 
  however. 
  From 
  Palm 
  Valley 
  to 
  Austin, 
  some 
  

   twenty 
  miles, 
  the 
  International 
  & 
  Great 
  Northern 
  Ry. 
  runs 
  practi- 
  

   cally 
  on 
  the 
  fall-line, 
  and 
  along 
  there, 
  ^s 
  well 
  as 
  in 
  a 
  few 
  other 
  

  

  ^JtAk 
  

  

  me 
  

  

  ion 
  villa 
  

  

  ILLS 
  

  

  '^' 
  

  

  •fiiiU 
  

  

  LOfJaJfLfAF 
  

  

  JklB 
  

  

  f$T8 
  

  

  B£Lr 
  

  

  T^EGIONAL 
  MAP 
  

  

  OP 
  A 
  PART 
  OP 
  

  

  EASTERN 
  TEXAS 
  

  

  AUTHOR'S 
  ROUTC 
  

  

  

  GULF 
  

  

  Fig. 
  I. 
  Map 
  showing 
  approximate 
  location 
  of 
  the 
  regions 
  described 
  herein 
  

  

  and 
  routes 
  of 
  the 
  author 
  in 
  1915 
  and 
  1918. 
  Scale 
  about 
  i 
  to 
  4,700.000. 
  or 
  75 
  miles 
  

   to 
  the 
  inch. 
  

  

  near 
  

  

  on 
  the 
  branches 
  of 
  live 
  oaks. 
  By 
  Texas 
  botanists 
  this 
  has 
  been 
  

   referred 
  without 
  question 
  to 
  T. 
  recurvata 
  L., 
  but 
  it 
  differs 
  from 
  

   that 
  species 
  as 
  represented 
  in 
  Florida 
  in 
  being 
  more 
  densely 
  

  

  I 
  

  

  especi 
  

  

  It 
  has 
  been 
  made 
  the 
  

  

  Will 
  

  

  * 
  The 
  anatomy 
  and 
  some 
  biological 
  [sic] 
  aspects 
  of 
  the 
  "ball 
  moss." 
  Tillandsia 
  

   murraja 
  L 
  Univ. 
  Texas 
  Bull. 
  194. 
  24 
  pp.. 
  jo 
  pis. 
  "Aug. 
  8. 
  1911." 
  (Apparently 
  

   puDUshed 
  about 
  the 
  beginning 
  of 
  1912.) 
  

  

  