FISHES OF KENTUCKY AND TENNESSEE. 



327 



Only a few specimens were obtained from Wolf River. Ill-will and Spring Creeks flow 

 into Wolf River. Collections were made in Spring Creek from its middle course between 

 the mouths of Albany Branch and Smith Creek, a distance of 2 miles. Smith Creek 

 flows into Spring Creek and was investigated for its entire length. Albany branch 

 also flows into Spring Creek and was examined in its upper and middle courses. 

 The list of species is as follows : 



1893. Philip H. Kirsch. 



Notes on a Collection of Fishes from the Southern Tributaries of the Cumberland River in 

 Kentucky and Tennessee. -C^Bull. U. S. Fish Comm., vol. xi, 1891 (May 25, 1893), 

 pp. 257-265. 



During the period from August 18 to September 9, 1891, Dr. Kirsch made collec- 

 tions of fishes in certain southern tributaries of the Cumberland River between Nash- 

 ville and the Cincinnati Southern Railroad, as follows: 



West Fork of Stone River for a distance of i mile below Murfreesboro, Tenn., 

 August 20; Spring Creek at Springcreek station, Tenn., 12 miles from its mouth, 

 August 21; Round Lick Creek at Watertown, Term., August 22; Caney Fork River, i 

 mile west of Lancaster, Tenn., August 24; Smith Fork (a tributary of Caney Fork) 

 near Lancaster, August 24; Roaring River, a few miles from Windle, Tenn., August 30; 

 Spring Creek (a tributary of Roaring River) at Netherland, Tenn., August 25; Obeys 

 River at Olympus, Tenn., August 28; Eagle Creek (a tributary of Obeys River) near 

 Olympus, August 27; Wolf River (a tributary of Obeys River) 3 miles north of Byrds- 

 town, Tenn., August 28; Cumberland River near the mouth of Willis Creek, Cumber- 

 land County, Ky., September i ; Willis Creek at its mouth, September i ; Beaver Creek 

 above and below McCackney's milldara, Wayne County, Ky., September 3; Otter 

 Creek (a tributary of Beaver Creek) near Jones's milldam on the Monticello and Albany 



