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stone sinks which support a great variety of herbaceous and woody 
plants. A number of ferns we had not before encountered were 
found here, and Ibidium lucayanum grew much larger and in 
Fig. 20. Cephalocereus bahamensis in the “‘coppice’’ along Deep Creek. Older 
plants are much more copiously branched. 
greater profusion, together with the larger-leaved and otherwise 
more conspicuous orchid, Govenia utriculata. Among the woody 
plants, Ilex Krugiana and Vitis Munsoniana, both natives of 
