104 SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA. 
Quercus myrtifolia, viii. 123. On the sandy shores of St. George’s Sound, near Carribel, to the eastward 
of the mouth of the Appalachicola River in Florida, Quercus myrtifolia sometimes assumes a treelike habit, rising 
to a height of twenty-five feet and forming a straight trunk from four to six inches in diameter. 
Quercus Texana, viii. 129. Extend range through northern Alabama, southeastern Tennessee, and northern 
Georgia to the banks of the Congaree River near Columbia, South Carolina, where it grows to a very large 
size and where it was found in May, 1897, by W. M. Canby and C. S. Sargent, to the Piedmont plateau of 
North Carolina (Ashe, Bot. Gazette, xxiv. 376), and to the Atlantic coast plain in Onslow County, North 
Carolina (Ashe, Bot. Glazette, xxviii. 271). It is common but of small size on dry limestone hills near Hunts- 
ville, Alabama, on Orchard Knob and other limestone hills near Chattanooga, Tennessee, on the dry banks of the 
Coosa River at Rome, Georgia, and near Atlanta, Georgia. Extend range also to Starkville, Oktibbeha County, 
Mississippi, where it was found in October, 1894, by Professor M.S. Tracy; to Post Oak, Lowndes County, 
Mississippi, where it was collected by Dr. Charles Mohr in October, 1894; and to southeastern Kansas (Hitch- 
cock, The Industrialist, xxiv. 823 [Flora of Kansas]). 
Quercus velutina, viii. 137. Extend range to southeastern Nebraska, where it was collected near Nebraska 
City in 1894 by Mr. J. H. Masters. (este Herb. University of Nebraska.) 
Quercus palustris, viii. 151. Extend range to southwestern Tennessee, where it is common on bottom- 
lands in the neighborhood of Memphis. 
Quercus imbricaria, viii. 175. It was probably an error to consider this tree an inhabitant of Wisconsin. 
The neighborhood of Muscatine in southeastern Iowa is now believed to be the most northern station, where it 
grows in the Mississippi valley. (Teste L. H. Pammel.) 
Fagus Americana, ix. 27. The range of this tree in Wisconsin is confined to the eastern counties, where 
it is common, especially near the shores of Lake Michigan. 
Ostrya Virginiana, ix. 34. Extend range southward in Florida to Lake City, Columbia County, where it 
was collected in July, 1895, by Mr. G. B. Nash. During the summer of 1899 Mr. C. G. Pringle found this tree 
in the neighborhood of Jalapa in southern Mexico. 
Carpinus Caroliniana, ix. 42. During the summer of 1899 Mr. C. G. Pringle found in Mexico Carpinus 
Caroliniana on the mountains near Jalapa and Orizaba at an elevation of about four thousand feet above the level 
of the sea and at an elevation of six thousand feet above the sea near Cuernavaca, where in the deep rich cafions of 
the mountains which form the southern rim of the valley of Mexico this tree, surpassing in size all the known Horn- 
beams of the world, reaches a height of one hundred feet and forms a trunk from three to four feet in diameter. 
Betula lenta, ix. 50. Extend range to central Iowa, where it was found in 1900 at Steamboat Rock near the 
banks of the Iowa River by L. H. Pammel. 
Betula papyrifera, ix. 57. Extend range to central Iowa, where it was found in June, 1900, at Steamboat 
Rock near the banks of the Iowa River by L. H. Pammel. 
Alnus, ix. 67. Betula and Alnus were first united by Linnezus in the tenth edition of the Systema (ii. 
1265), published in 1759, and subsequently in the sixth edition of the Genera, published in 1764. 
Alnus glutinosa, ix. 69. Betula glutinosa was first published in 1759 by Linneus in the tenth edition of 
the Systema (ii. 1265), and subsequently by Lamarck in 1783. 
Alnus tenuifolia, ix. 75. Extend range northward in British Columbia to latitude 61, where it was found 
on the shores of Francis Lake on July 16, 1887, by Dr. G. M. Dawson; and eastward along the Saskatchewan to 
the neighborhood of Prince Albert, where it was found in July, 1896, by Mr. John Macoun. (See, also, xiv. 62.) 
Myrica cerifera, ix. 87. Extend range northward to Millsborough, Sussex County, Delaware, where it is 
common in sandy barrens as a low broad shrub, and where it was found on October 12, 1898, by John Muir, 
W. M. Canby, and C. S. Sargent; and to Cape May, New Jersey, where it was found March 30, 1899, by Mr. 
W. M. Canby, and where in sandy soil close to the sea it is a tree from twenty-five to thirty feet in height. 
Salix Wardi, ix. 107. This is the common Willow of the Ozark mountain region of southwestern Missouri 
and northwestern and western Arkansas, where it is very abundant on rocky banks of all streams, often growing 
to the height of thirty feet, and forming a trunk from twelve to eighteen inches in diameter. 
Salix Bebbiana, ix. 131. Extend range to the shores of Cook Inlet, Alaska. (See Coville, Proc. Wash- 
ington Acad. Sci. ii. 283 ; iii. 806.) 
Salix Missouriensis, ix. 137. Extend range eastward to Iowa, where this tree grows in the Mississippi 
River valley near Sioux City in the extreme northwestern part of Lyon County, and in the Mississippi River 
valley in the neighborhood of Davenport and Muscatine (see Ball, Proc. Iowa Acad. Sci. vii. 152) ; and through 
northeastern Kansas to Riley County, Kansas (Hitchcock, The Industrialist, xxiv. 823 [Flora of Kansas]). 
