12 ECONOMIC BOTANY OF ALABAMA. 



McCalley, Henry. — 1. Alabama north of the Tennessee River. Rep. 

 Geol. Surv. Ala. 1879-1880, pp. 67-154. 1881. 



Notes on forests on pages 73-74, 86, 139-140, etc. 



2. On the Warrior coal field. 571 pp. (Geol. Surv. Ala.) 1886. 



3. Report on the Coal Measures of the plateau region of Ala- 

 bama. (Including a report on the Coal Measures of Blount 

 County by A. M. Gibson.) 238 pp. (Geol. Surv. Ala.) 1891. 



4. Report on the valley regions of Alabama (Paleozoic strata). 

 Part I, The Tennessee valley region, xvii + 436 pp., 4 figs., 

 9 plates. (Geol. Surv. Ala.) 1896. 



5. (Same), Part II. The Coosa valley region, xxii + 862 pp., 

 14 figs., 25 plates. 1897. 



All these reports of McCalley's contain abundant notes 

 on the trees characterizing the various geological forma- 

 tions. 



McGuire, W. W. — On the prairies of Alabama. Am. Jour. Sci. 26: 

 93-98 1834. 



Mohr, Charles. — 1. The forests of Alabama and their products. 

 Berney's Handbook (cited above), pp. 221-235. 1878. 



2. List of trees and shrubs characteristic of each region of the 

 state. Rep. Geol. Surv. Ala. 1881-1882, pp. 291-297. 1883. 

 (See Smith No. 7, below, for full title of this volume.) 



The same list appears also in Tenth Census U. S. 6:67-69. 

 1884 (?). 



3. (Notes on the forests of Alabama.) Tenth Census U. S. 

 9:525-530. 1884. 



4. The mountain flora of Alabama. Garden & Forest 5:507- 

 508. Oct. 26, 1892. 



5. The timber pines of the southern United States. (Together 

 with a discussion of the structure of their wood, bv Filibert 

 Roth.) U. S. Dept. Agriculture, Div. Forestry, Bull. 13. 160 

 pp., 27 plates. 4to. 1896. 



6. (Revised edition of same Bulletin 13, with additional notes 

 by Dr. Roth.) 176 pp., otherwise similar. 1897. 



7. Report on the forests of Sand Mountain. The Forester 4: 

 211-215. Oct. 1898. 



8. Plant Life of Alabama. An account of the distribution, 

 modes of association, and adaptations of the flora of Ala- 

 bama, together with a systematic catalogue of the plants 

 growing in the state. Contributions from the U. S. Na- 

 tional Herbarium, vol. 6. 921 pp., 13 plates. July 31, 1901. 



Also issued by the Geological Survey of Alabama, with 

 the addition of a biographical sketch of the author (by Dr. 

 E. A. Smith) and portraits of him and Judge T. M. Peters, 

 in October, 1901. 



Dr. Mohr was the author of about 100 scientific papers, 

 but the above, especially the last one, contain the essence 

 of practically all that are of importance to the student of 

 Alabama forestry. His magnum opus, the Plant Life of 

 Alabama, is doubtless the best description yet published of 

 the vegetation of any whole state or similar area. Unfor- 



