u 



Charadriidfe— 273. 



Tetraonidae— 289. 



Columbid^e — 316. 



Cathartidae — 325. 



Falconidae — 333. 337. 'M7a. 300. 



364. 

 Strigidae — 365. 

 Buconidse— 367, 373. 375. 

 Cuculidae — 387. 

 Alcedinidse — 390. 

 Picidce — 393. 394. 402. 406. 4(I9, 



412. 

 Caprimulgidae — 117, 420. 

 Micropodidee — 423. 

 Trochilidae— 428. 

 Tvrann idee— 444. 452. 456, 4(il. 



Fringillidae— 529, 540, 542<7, 558 

 559, 560, 563, 567, 581. 585, 587, 

 593, 595, 598, 604. 



Tanagridae — 608. 



Hirundinidae — 611, 613. 



Ampelidae — 619. 



\'ireonidae — 624, 627, 628. 



Mniotiltidas — 636. 641. 647, 652, 

 654. 655, 657, 660, 661, 667, 672, 

 674. 679. 681. 683, 685. 687. 



^lontacillida; — 697. 



Troglodytidae— 704, 7(i5. 719. 721. 



Certhiidae — 726. 



Paridae— 727, 728, 731, 7.^.. 



Turdidae— 748, 749. 751. 755. 75S(?, 

 759<^, 761, 766. 



OCCURRENCE OF GLACIAL PLANTS IN OHIO. 



BY H. C. BEARDSLEE. 



(ABSTRACT.) 



Cornus canadensis L. and Andromeda polifolia L. are 

 typical examples pf a class of plants whose distribution 

 seems instructive. 



The first has been reported for two stations, at Paines- 

 ville, and Ashtabula very close to Lake Erie. In both these 

 stations the areas frequented were restricted, and in the 

 former station it has disappeared. 



Andromeda polifolia has been found at Bass Lake 

 in northern Ohio. 



In the spring of 1898. both the plants were found by 

 the writer in a bog near Canton, in which the conditions 

 closely resemble those or the northern peat bogs. 



Both of these plants are very abundant in Southern 

 Canada and their occurrence in these three widely separated 

 stations leads to the belief that they are remnants of the 

 olacial Flora of Ohio. 



