129 



but it is worth putting on record. From rather fragmentary 

 observations on three different days in consecutive years I 

 have made up the following plant list, which arranges the species 

 in each size class in approximate order of abundance, as before, 

 and omits those noted only once. 



HERBS 

 Cracca virginiana 

 Coreopsis Oemleri 

 Andropogon scopariiis 

 Eupatoriiim album 

 Sericocarpus aster aides 

 Silphium compositum 

 Pteridium aquilinum 

 Laciniaria graminifolia 

 Solid ago odor a 

 Erigeron ramosus 

 Polygala Curtissii 

 Vernonia oligophylla 

 Nolina georgiana 

 Lespedeza repens 

 Allium miitabilel 

 Chrysopsis graminifolia 



TREES 

 Pinus Taeda 

 Pinusechinata 

 Pinus paluslris 

 Hicoria alba 

 Quercus falcata 

 Liqiiidambar Styraciflua 



SMALL TREES 

 Quercus marylandica 

 Cornusflorida 

 Quercus stellata 



VINES 

 Vitis rotundifolia 



SHRUBS 

 Clinopodium georgianum 

 Polycodium caesium? 

 Rhus copallina 

 Crataegus uni flora? 

 Rhus Toxicodendron 

 Ceanothtis americanus 

 Vaccinium pennsylvanicum? 



Most of the specimens oi Pinus palustriswere. rather stunted, 

 as if the environment did not suit them very well; but there 

 may have once been larger ones, that have fallen a prey to 

 lumbermen. The Climopodium^ is more abundant there than 

 I have seen it in any other equal area. (It seems to have been 

 discovered by Michaux near Augusta, about 25 miles away.) 

 Most species of Polycodium have fruit that is rather bitter 

 and not very palatable, but the one on the purple rock had 

 the largest and finest fruit (ripe in late August) that I ever 

 saw in that genus, with the possible exception of a taller one 

 that grows in sandy hammocks in Wakulla County, Florida. 

 The species in this genus are not very sharply defined, and this 



* Formerly called C. carolinianum. For the reasons why that name was un- 

 tenable see Bull. Torrey Bot. Club Zi: 243-245. 1906. 



