SOURCES OF INFORMATION. 18 



tunately it was not published until after his death, and it 

 seems to have undergone considerable editing in Washing- 

 ton, so that it may not represent his views exactly. 



Numerous other titles by Dr. Mohr can be found in Owen's 

 Bibliography of Alabama, referred to on a preceding page. 



Reed, F. W. — A working plan for forest lands in central Alabama. 

 U. S. Dept. Agriculture, Forest Service, Bull. 68. 71 pp., 

 4 plates, 2 maps. 1905. 



Comprises excellent descriptions of two large tracts of 

 long-leaf pine timber belonging to the same company; one 

 in the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge in Coosa County, and the 

 other in the central pine belt, chiefly in Bibb and Hale 

 Counties. 



Schwarz, G. F. — The long-leaf pine in virgin forest. 16mo, xii + 

 135 pp., 23 full-page half-tone figures in text, colored map, 

 and 2 folded diagrams. New York (May), 1907. 



Based partly on studies made in Baldwin Co., Ala. Con- 

 tains valuable notes on the effects of fire, among other 

 things. 



Smith, Eugene A. — 1. Geological Survey of Alabama. Report of 

 progress for 1874. 139 pp. 1875. 



Describes the Blue Ridge and Piedmont regions, with oc- 

 casional notes on vegetation. 



2. (Same for 1875.) 220 pp. 1876. 



Chiefly devoted to the Coosa valley region, in Bibb, Shel- 

 by, Talladega and Calhoun Counties. 



3. (Same for 1876.) 100 pp. 1876. 



Describes Roup's and Jones's Valleys and the Coosa coal 

 field. 



4. (Same for 1877 and 1878.) 139 pp., 4 colored geological 

 maps of single counties. 1879. 



Describes the Tennessee valley region and the western 

 parts of the coal region, treating several counties in consid- 

 erable detail. 



5. (Same for 1879 and 1880.) 158 pp., 2 maps. 1881. 



Includes description of part of the Warrior coal field, and 

 McCalley's report on the northern tier of counties. (See 

 McCalley 1, above.) 



6. Report on the cotton production of the state of Alabama, 

 with a discussion of the general agricultural features of the 

 state. Tenth Census U. S. 6:3-173, 2 colored maps. "1884." 

 (Some copies must have been in circulation as early as 

 1883, for there is internal evidence that this was printed be- 

 fore No. 7.) 



A remarkably complete geographical description of the 

 state, by natural divisions and by counties, with many soil 

 analyses, and two special chapters on cotton production. 

 More accessible than the next, having been published in a 

 much larger edition, but a little inconvenient to refer to on 

 account of its quarto size and double system of page-num- 

 bers. (The page-numbers of this work cited in the several 



