393 



Plate I. 



WHITE COUNTY. 



507 Square Miles— 324,480 Acres. 



Low sand ridges are especially characteristic of Honey Creek and 

 Monon townships and also parts of Princeton. This area is very 

 densely covered with forests of oak (almost exclusively Q. alba, palustris, 

 velutina, coccinea). 



In the environs of the Tippecanoe River and eastward the topog- 

 raphy is rather more rugged. Very good farm lands are also found in 

 this area. Formerly almost every foot of this region was heavily 

 wooded. 



