552 HARPER: PINE-BARREN VEGETATION OF MISSISSIPPI 
B. D. Halsted. Southern Mississippi floral notes. Gard. and For. 4: 
250-251. 27 May 1891. 
Relates to the vicinity of Ocean Springs, in May. 
— The giant sundew heliotropic. Bull. Torrey Club 18: 212-213. 
July 1891. 
Relates to the plant now known as Drosera filiformis Tracyi (Macfarlane) Diels,* 
and a few other species observed around Ocean Springs 
Charles Mohr. The timber pines of the southern United States. U.S. 
Forestry Bull. 13. 1896 and 1897. 
Notes on long-leaf pine in Mississippi on pages 42— 
C. L. Pollard. Studies in the flora of the ster Gulf region. Bull. 
Torrey Club 24: 148-158. Mar. 1897. 
Andrew Allison. Notes on the winter birds of Hancock County, Mis- 
sissippi. The Auk 23: 44-47. Jan. 1906. 
Contains about a page of interesting notes on the vegetation. 
R. M. Harper. Midwinter observations in southeastern Mississippi 
and eastern Louisiana. Torreya 6: 197-205.f.r. Oct. 1906. 
J. S. Holmes & J. H. Foster. Condition of cut-over long-leaf pine 
lands in Mississippi. U.S. Forest Service Circular 149. 8 pp- 
May 1908. 
— A study of forest conditions of southwestern Mississippi. Miss. 
Geol. Surv. Bull. 5. 56 pp. and folded colored map. Dated Jan- 
uary, 1908, on title-page and March 17, 1909, in letter of trans- 
mittal, but not distributed until 1910 or I9It. 
E. N. Lowe. A preliminary study of the soils of Mississippi. Miss. 
Geol. Surv. Bull. 8. 220 pp., outline map, and 23 half-tones, mostly 
in text. IQII. 
Contains copious notes on vegetation. 
W.N. Logan. The soils of Mississippi. Miss. Exp. Sta., Technical 
Bull. 4. 49 pp. and folded colored map. 1913. 
R.M.Harper. The forest regions of Mississippi in relation to the lumber 
industry: a geographical and statistical study. Southern Lumber- 
man 70%: 27-28. 23 Aug. 1913. 
Includes a small geographical map. Also reprinted in octavo size, with 8 pages- 
E. N. Lowe. Note on the flora of Mississippi. Miss. Geol. Surv. Bull. 
11: 137-166, including full-page geographical map. Dec. 1913- 
This poise divides the state into nine divisions, and sketches the vegetation of 
each. It has also been issued separately as a 32-page pamphlet with the title “A 
brief note on fon floral regions of Mississippi.” The remainder of Bulletin 11 consists 
of Bulletins 5 and 7 reprinted, with the addition of three half-tone plates copied from 
other publications, and a 3-page statistical supplement on the lumber industry of 
Mississippi. 
* Déectibed in in Engler’s Pflanzenreich 4': 92. 1906. 
