76 JVew Localities of Plants. 



odoratissima. I am informed that it grows in Onslow County, inter- 

 mediate between Newbern and Wilmington. Flowers early in June. 



2. Macbridea pulchra, El. 



Found by me in Lenoir County, N. C. flowering in August. 



3. Finns pungens. (Table Mountain Pine.) 



Grows On the elevated and rocky summit of the Pilot mountain, 

 Stokes County, N. C. Hitherto found only on the Table Mountain, 

 and " other summits of the Catawba Ridge." See Michaux and 

 Nuttall. 



4. Magnolia macrophylla, (Large leaf Magnolia.) 



Grows in Florida, on the outer margin of the swamp of the Apa- 

 lachicola river. The petals of some of the flowers measured seven 

 inches in length, while those of M. grandiflora measured six inches. 

 I am informed that it grows in the upper parts of Georgia and Alaba- 

 ma. Its original region is probably sub-alpine, and the plants that 

 grow in Florida may have sprung from seeds carried down by the 

 freshets of the Chattohochie. In like manner the Pecan trees, (Jug- 

 lans olivaeformis) which I saw on the banks of the Mississippi, thirty 

 miles below New Orleans, were probably brought by the freshets 

 from their native climates on the Illinois and the Ohio. Flowers in 

 April. 



5. Penstemon dissectum, El. 



Abundant in wet Pine woods, between the Oakmulgee and Oconee 

 rivers, Georgia. Flowers in May. 



6. Prenanthes aphylla, Nutt. 



In Florida, and the southern parts of Georgia. Flowers in May. 



7. Andromeda speciosa, var. pulveridenta. 



Abundant in wet places, from Fayetteville, N. C. to the Pedee 

 river. Flowers in May, June. 



8. Ledum buxifolium. 



Found by Dr. Loomis, seven miles south of Fayetteville, N. C. 



9. Peucedanum ternatum. 



Found by Mr. Nuttall, near Newbern, N. C. in 1832. 



10. Orontium aquaticum. 



Grows in the lagoons of the Ocklockony river, Florida, fifteen to 

 twenty miles above the tides. Flowers in April. 

 il. Galax rotundifolia. (aphylla, Nutt.) 

 Grows near Newbern, N. C. 

 12. Cypripedium humile. 

 Founds though rarely, near Newbern, N. C. 



