8 CONTRIBUTIONS TO NORTH AMERICAN ICHTHYOLOGY III. 



basins by Professor Jordan.* The purpose of this paper is to give a 

 resume of all that is certainly known in regard to the ichthyology of 

 the seven hydrographic basins embraced in its scope, viz, the Sautee, 

 Savannah, Altamaha, Chattahoochee, Alabama, Tennessee, and Cum- 

 berland. For purposes of comparison, a table of distribution of species 

 is added, which includes, in addition, what is known of the fish-faunae 

 of the James, Roanoke, Neuse, Great Pedee, and Ohio. 



The following is a classified list of the streams which have been ex- 

 amined in each water-basin included in this paper, with a word or two 

 suggestive of the character of each stream. The collections in every 

 case were made by one or both of the present writers, unless otherwise 



stated. 



LIST OF STREAMS EXAMINED. 



I. SANTEE BASIN. 



1. Catawba River and tributaries in North Carolina. (Cope, 18G9.) 



2. Ennoree River, near Chick Springs, S. C. (Deep, muddy, and rapid.) 



3. Reedy River, at Greenville Court-House, S. C. (Muddy.) 



4. Saluda River, at Farr's Mills, west of Greenville. (Clear and rapid j 



a fine seining-grotind.) 



II. SAVANNAH BASIN. 



1. Tugaloo River, Habersham County, Ga., just below mouth of Panther. 



(Clear, broad rapids.) 



2. Panther Creek, north of Toccoa City, Ga. (Clear mountain-stream.) 



3. Toccoa Creek, below Toccoa Falls, Ga. (Clear, cold mountain - 



stream ; contains little besides Hydrophlox rubricroceus.) 



4. Toxaway and Chatuga Rivers and tributaries about the foot of White- 



side Mountain. (Clear mountain-streams, abounding in Trout.) 



III. ALT AM AH A BASIN. 



1. Oconee River, at Sulphur Springs and Fuller's Mills, Hall County, 



Georgia. (Clear.) 



2. Ocmulgee River, Reed's Fish-pond, south of Atlanta, Ga. (Head- 



waters; clear.) 



3. Ocmulgee River, South Fork, Flat Rock, De Kalb County, Georgia. 



(Partly clear ; a small falls, and a deep basin worn in granite rock; 

 a fine stream for seining.) 



* A Partial Synopsis of the Fishes of Upper Georgia ; with Supplementary Papers on 

 Fishes of Tennessee, Kentucky and Indiana. By David Starr Jordan, M. D., Ph. D 

 < Annals N. Y. Lyceum Nat. Hist. vol. xi, 1877, pp. 307-377. 



