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5. While the difference in wind velocity would also tend to 

 indicate less favorable conditions for transpiration on the bog than 

 on the neighboring hard land, the difference in the height of the 

 two instruments must be taken into account. 



The conclusions are those of the reviewer. Some of the data 

 have also been rearranged in order to bear on the problem of the 

 possible factors in the general inhibition from sphagnum bogs of 

 plants other than bog xerophytes. — George B. Rigg, University 

 of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 



