140 RESOURCES OF SOUTHERN ALABAMA. 



ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS 



Page 



14. The initials L.-S. and P. H. on the map indicate small discon- 

 nected areas of the lime-sink region and southwestern pine hills. 



18 (and 121). The fact that the number of farm owners and tenants 

 was given by the census of 1890 was overlooked when these 

 pages were written, though taken advantage of in Tables 3, 7 

 and 15. 



19. In line 33, before plates read on. 



22. A paper on the relations of soil, climate and civilization in the 

 southern red hills of Alabama is being published in the South 

 Atlantic Quarterly (Durham, N. C.), vol. 19, no. 3, almost 

 simultaneously with this report. 



48. In line 16, for newspaper read newspapers. 



51. The boll-weevil monument in Enterprise is said to have been 

 unveiled on Dec. 11, 1919. 



57. The 1920 population of Dothan was announced on June 10 as 

 10,034. 



63. Fig. 21 is from the same photograph used in Monograph 8, fig. 47. 



64. Fig. 22 is from a photograph previously published in the Journal 



of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society (Chapel Hill, N. C.), 

 October, 1918. (See title no. 8, page 22 of this work.) 



69. For notes on the distribution of the southeastern "salamanders" 

 see Science II. 35:115-119. Jan. 19, 1912. (To this day the 

 writer has never seen one of the animals.) 



72. The "Creoles" of Mobile are said to differ from the better-known 

 ones of New Orleans and vicinity in having a perceptible 

 amount of negro blood. 



74. Revised figures for the 1920 population of Mobile issued by the 

 Census Bureau on June 15 place the total at 60,151. 



93. Some of the Eocene formations of Alabama, particularly the 

 Claiborne at the bluff of that name on the Alabama River in 

 Monroe County, are noted for the abundance and variety and 

 excellent state of preservation of their fossil shells. 



99. Electricity from the Pea River power plant is said to be used also 

 at Enterprise. 



