PIXACKAK AND TAXACEAE 



213 



Booth, Juhii. Die uatunilisation tier Douglasfichte — eiii 



•' liazardspiel?" [Berlin. 1890.] 

 Cline, McGarvey, and Knapp, J. B. Properties and uses c)f 



Oduglas fir. Washington. 1911. 

 Cooley, R. A. The Douglas spruce cone moth. Bozeman. 



190S. 

 Dieck, Georg. Die acclimatisation der Douglasfichte. 



[Stuttgart. 1889.) 

 Die Booth'sche acclimati.sation der Douglasfichte 



war und ist — • ein liazardspiel. [Berlin. 1890.) 

 Frothingham, E. H. Douglas fir; a study of the Pacific 



coast and Rocky Mountain forms. Washington. 1909. 

 Hutchison, Roljert. On the value of the Corsican, Aus- 

 trian, and Douglas firs, as timber trees in Great Britain. 



Edinl)urgh. 1873. 

 Knapp, J. B. Fire-killed Douglas fir. Washington. 1912. 

 Munger, T. T. The growth and management of Douglas 



fir in the Pacific northwest. Washington. 1911. 

 Poulsen, C. M. Om nogle i vort skovbrug anvendelige 



naaletrieer fra det vestlige Nordamerica. i. Abies Doug- 



lasii Lindl. Ki0benhavn. 1879. 



SCIADOPITYS 



Masters, M. T. On the comparative morphology of Sciado- 

 pitys. [London. 1884.] 



SEQUOIA 

 Dupuis, Aristide. Sur les Sequoia. [Paris. 1859.] 

 Gray, Asa. Sequoia and its history. Salem. 1872. 

 [The same.] 



Amer.journ. sci. arts, 1872, 3d ser., iv, 282-298. 



[The same] Cambridge. 1873. 



Sherwood, G. H. The Sequoia. [New York. 1902.] 



Species 

 S. gigantea 

 Beauvoir, Ludovic, marquis de. Le Wellingtonia gigantea. 

 (In his Voyage autour du monde, 1872, iii, 306-323.) 



Clark, Galen. The big trees of California, their history and 



characteristics. Yo.semite Valley. 1907. 

 Description of the mammoth tree from California, now 



erected at the Crystal Palace, Sydenham. [London. 1857.] 



Dudley, W. R. The vitaUty of the Sequoia gigantea. (In 

 Dudley memorial volume, 1913, pp. 33-42.) 



Joly, Charles. Note sur les arbres geants de la Californie. 

 (Paris. 1883.] 



Leitch, B. M. Mariposa grove of l)ig trees, California. 

 [San FrancLsco? 1910.] 



Muir, John. On the post-glacial history of Sequoia gigantea. 



Proc. Amer. assoc. advanc. scL, 1876, pp. 242-2.53. 



The same, reprinted. 



Seemann, Berthold. On the mammoth-tree [Sequoia Wel- 

 lingtonia] of upi)er California. 



.■\nnah and mngazine of natural history, 1850. 3d ser.. iii, 161-175. 



The same, reprinted. 



Sudworth, G. B. Present condition of the California big- 

 trees. \ 



American museum journal, 1912, xii, 227-236. 



United States — Department of agriculture — Forest service. 



.\ short account of the big trees of California. Washington. 



1900. 

 Wilhams, J. O. Mammoth trees of California. Boston. 



IS71. 



S. sempervirens 

 Bonner, W. C;. The redwoods of California. San Francisco. 



1884. 

 Cherry, Edgar, & cc, publishers. Redwood and lumbering 



in California forests. San Franci.sco. 1884. 



Eastwood, Alice. On heteromorphic organs of Sequoia 

 sempervirens. [San Francisco. 1896.] 



Eddy, J. M., compiler. In the redwood's realm. San 

 Francisco. 1893. 



Fisher, R. T. The retlwood. A study of the redwood; 

 by R. T. Fisher. The brown rot disease; by Hermann von 

 Schrenk. In,sect enemies of the redwood; by A. D. Hop- 

 kins. Washington. 1903. 



Gordon, Marjorie. Ray tracheids in Sequoia sempervirens. 

 [London.] 1912. 

 "Literature cited," p. 7. 



Heim, k. L. Mechanical properties of redwood. Washing- 

 ton. 1912. 



Hopkins, A. D. Insect enemies of the redwood. {In 

 Fisher, R. T. The redwood, 1903, pp. 32-40.) 



Kellogg, Albert. Essay upon redwood. {In Cherry, 

 Edgar, & cc, publishers Redwood and lumbering in Cali- 

 fornia forests, 1884, pp. 77-107.) 



Muir, John. Hunting big redwoods. 

 Atlantic monthly, 1901, Ixxxviii, 304-320. 



Peirce, G. J. Studies on the coast redwood, Sequoia sem- 

 pervirens Endl. San Francisco. 1901. 



Plummer, H. W. California redwoods. No. 1-4. [San 

 Francisco. 1886-87.] 



Redwood lumber manufacturers' association, Cali- 

 fornia. The home of the redwood; a souvenir of the lumber 

 industry of CaUfornia. San Franci.sco. 1897. 



[Sargent, C. S.] The height of the redwood. Sequoia sem- 

 pervirens. 



Clipping from Garden and forest, 1897, x, 42. 



Schrenk, Hermann von. The brown rot disease of the 

 redwood. {In Fischer, R. T. The redwood, 1903, pp. 

 29-31.) 



TAIWANIA 



Hayata, Bunzo. On Taiwania, a new genus of Coniferte from 

 the island of Formosa. (London. 1904-06.] 



TAXODIUM 



Berry, E. W. Notes on the ancestry of the bald cypress. 



The Plant World, 1911, xiv, 39-45. 



Coulter, Stanlev. Histology of the leaf of Taxodium. [Craw- 



fordsviUe, Ind.' 1889.) 

 Cubieres, S. L. P., marquis de. Mcmoire sur le cypres de la 



Louisi^ne, Cupressus disticha, de Linne. [Avec Rapport 



par MM. Desfontaines, Thouin et Mirbel, sur le miSmoire. 



\'ersailles. 1809.] 

 Dickeson, M. W., and Brown, Andrew. On the cypress 



timber of Mississippi and Louisiana. 

 Amer.journ. sci. arts, 1848, v, 15-22. 



The same. Philadelphia. 1848. 



Harper, R. M. Taxodium distichum and related species, 

 with notes on some geological factors influencing their dis- 

 tribution. New York. 1902. 



Koehne, Emil. Ubcr taxodien. 



Naturwissenschafllictie wochenschrift, 1905, rx, 122-124. 



Taxodium imbricarium. [Bonn-PoppeLsdorf. 1908.] 



Vorweltliohe und lebende taxodien. (Bonn-Poppels- 



dorf. 1907.] 



Lotsy, J. P. The formation of the so-called cypress-knees 

 on the roots of the Taxodium distichuin Richard. [Balti- 

 more. 1893.] 



Mattoon, W. R. The southern cypress. Washington. 1915. 



Ridgway, Robert. The Little Cypre.ss Swamp of Indiana. 



Field and forest, 1877, ii, 93-96. 



Roth, Fihbert. Progress in timber physics. Bald cypress 

 (Taxodium distichum). [Washington. 1898.] 



Shaler, N. S. Notes on the Taxodium distichium [sic] or bald 

 cypress. — On the original connection of the eastern and 

 western coal-fields of the Ohio valley. Cambridge. 1887. 



