REFERENC ES 3^9 



NATUILA.L FORMS OF GROUND, ROCK, AND WATER 



Andre, Edouard. 



L'Art des Jardins, 1879. 



Les Eaux. In Ch. X, p. 437-47°- il'us. 

 Les Rochers. In Ch. X, p. 486-521. illus. 

 Marr, John E. 



The Scientific Study of Scenery. London, Methuen & Co., 1900. 368 pages. 



illus. 



Physiography with especial attention to the visual aspect of land and water forms. 



Olmsted, John Charles. 



The Treatment of Slopes and Banks. In Garden and Forest, Sept. 5, 1888, v. I, 

 p. 326-327. 



Illustrated with sections of good and bad slopes. 



Parsons, Samuel. 



The Art of Landscape Architecture, 191 5. 



Water. — Islands. Ch. VIII and IX, p. 145-169. illus. Also note plates 



from Piickler-Muskau, opp. p. 202 and 204. 

 Grading and Shaping Grounds. Ch. XI, p. 184-199. 

 Shaler, Nathaniel Southgate. 



Outlines of the Earth's History ; a popular study in physiography. New York, 

 D. Appleton and Co., 1898. 417 pages, illus. 

 The origins of land and water forms. 



Sea and Land. New York, C. Scribner's Sons, 1894. 252 pages, illus. 

 Sea and land. p. 1-37- 

 Sea-beaches, p. 38-74. 



VEGETATION. PLANTING DESIGN 



Architecture and Vines. In Garden and Forest, June 20, 1894, v. 7, p. 241-242. 

 The Artistic Aspect of Trees. In Garden and Forest, a series of seven articles, be- 

 ginning July 4, 1888, in V. i, and ending May 8, 1889, in v. 2. 

 Form, texture, and color are considered each in an article. 



Bailey, Liberty Hyde. 



The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture; a discussion, for the amateur, and 

 the professional and commercial grower, of the kinds, characteristics and methods 

 of cultivation of the species of plants grown in the regions of the United States 

 and Canada, for ornament, for fancy, for fruit, and for vegetables; with keys to 

 the natural families and genera, descriptions of the horticultural capabilities of 



