10 MONTANA AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE SCIENCE STUDIES. 



Jamaica Plains, Mass., of which he is Director. Their route extended 

 from Helena to the Flathead Agency, past the Flathead Lake and up 

 the N. Fk. of the Flathead River, over the Cutbank Pass and back 

 over the Lewis and Clark Pass. 



F. W. Anderson, son of an English minister of Great Falls, col- 

 lected about Great Falls, Ft. Benton, Little Belt and Highwood 

 Mountains, Helena and Sheridan (1883-88). Most of his personal 

 collections are in the herbarium of the College of Montana at Deer 

 Lodge, but his Fungi and Algae appear to have been secured by 

 the New York Botanical Garden with the herbarium of J. B. Ellis. 

 He published a number of papers on the flora of the state, mainly 

 on the Fungi and Algae in connection with Kelsey. 



E. W. Hilgard, now Director of the California Agricultural Ex- 

 periment Station at Berkeley, was engaged in making a soil survey 

 of the state in 1883 in connection with the Northern Transcontinen- 

 tal Survey and collected a series of plants in the plains region, chief- 

 ly along the Milk river, Judith Basin, Musselshell and the Yellow- 

 stone, but most of this collection was destroyed by fire, the remain- 

 der being at the University of California. 



J. B. Leiberg, while in the service of the Northern Pacific Railway 

 in the interest of tree-culture, made collections as far west as Glen- 

 dive and later published his notes on the botany of the region (Bot. 

 Gaz. 9: 103-107, 126-129. 1884). He also worked up the forestry of 

 the Bitter Root Forest Reserve in 1898 in the employ of the U. S. 

 Geological Survey which published his report (i9th Ann. Rep. L\ 

 S. Geol. Surv. 5: 253-282). 



J. S. Newberry collected along the Northern Pacific Railway in 

 1884, publishing a brief note on the botany (Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci, 

 3: 242-270. 1884). 



F. Lamson Scribner was here in 1883 with the Northern Transcon- 

 tinental Survey under W. M. Canby and devoted his attention par- 

 ticularly to studying the grasses. He made collections at Lima, 

 Dillon, Garrison, Helena and Bozeman and made a trip from Town- 

 send to White Sulphur Springs, Monarch and Ft. Benton. His own 

 private collection was destroyed by fire but there is a duplicate set 

 at the College of Pharmacy, New York. He published a paper* 



