225 
in northern peninsular Florida in the latter half of poe eighteenth 
how 
e Indian not returning this morning, I set sail alone. 
The coasts on each side of the Saint fl ohn’s River between 
ae George oa De ae had much the same appearance 
to be of a 
green plumed leav have measured the stem of these plac: 
eae feet in Tength, 1 oan the plume, which is nearly of the 
e length.’ 
uspected that these trees were killed during the severe 
cold oa of the thirties of the last century, or earlier. The 
object of our ioe being accomplished, we returned to Everglade 
for the nig! 
Our next oe e was Deep Lake, Dae lies in the w. aan 
A worn-out tramway 
largely upon the width of the sloping periphery of the lake shore 
or the area which is kept moist enough to repel the fires of the 
1 Travels ae North and South Carolina, Georgia and East and West 
Florida. 113, 1 1792. 
? Journal of The New York Botanical Garden 22: 203-205. 
