140 
At certain places in the deep woods this very beautiful and 
showy species was quite abundant and presented a most beautiful 
sight. j 
Phlox subulata, L. Dry, stony ledges on Kate's Mt., W. Va., alt. 
3,300 ft. 
Phlox ovata, L. Hillsides along McHenry Creek, alt. 2,600 ft. 
Polemonium reptans, L. Meadow near Hungry's Mother Creck, 
alt. 2,300 ft. Sandy banks of the Holston River at the Falls, 
alt. 2,050 ft. 
Hydrophyllum Canadense, L. On the southern slope of White 
Rock Mt., alt. 4,000 ft. Hills about Marion, alt. 2,200 ft. 
Under cliffs along Hungry's Mother Creek, alt. 2,200 ft. 
Hydrophyllum Virginicum, L. Mountains about Buchanan, alt. 
1,300 ft. Along Hungry's Mother Creek, alt. 2,200 ft. Sum- 
mit of Walker Mt., about Chatham Hill Gap, alt. 3,300 ft. 
Deep woods along Hutton's Branch, alt. 2,500 ft. Western 
slope of Mt. Rogers, alt. 5,000 ft. 
At all the above localities only the dark purple form of this 
Hydrophyllum was found, as was the case in the mountains of 
North Carolina on a previous journey.* 
Hydrophyllum macrophyllum, Nutt. Shaded banks of the Middle 
Fork Holston River at Marion, alt. 2,100 ft. Along Hungry’s 
Mother Creek, alt. 2,200 ft. Southern slope of White Rock 
Mt., alt. 4,000 ft. 
This species was rather plentiful at the different localities given, 
and seemed to be distributed generally through the territory of 
Southwestern Virginia, while fifty miles north in the mountains of 
North Carolina, in similar situations not a single plant was ob- 
served during the summer of 1891. 
Phacelia bipinnatifida, Michx. Southern slope of White Rock 
Mt., alt. 3,500 ft. 
Gray's Synoptical Flora indicates the range of this species as fol- 
lows “Ohio and Illinois to Alabama" thus cutting out all of the 
mountains except some of the western spurs of the Cumberlands. 
This range is not correct às the species extends over the summits 
*Mem. Torr. Bot. Club, iii. 5. 
