ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 137 



HYMENOPAPPUS L'Her.; Mx, Fl. 2:103. 1803. 

 H. Carolinensis (Lam.) Porter, Mem. Torrey Club, 5 : 338. 1894. 

 Dry sandy soil, bulloch and Montgomery; perhaps not 

 native. May-June. Common around Millen, just north of 

 our limits. 

 Said to range from South Carolina to Florida; Kansas, and 

 Texas, just as in the case of Gaillardia lanceolata, which it 

 also resembles in habitat. Not reported from Alabama. 



MARSHALLIA Schreb.; Gmel. Syst. 2:1208. 1791. (Not of 

 page 836 of same work.) 

 Phyteumopsis Juss;. Poir., Suppl. 4:405. 1816. 

 M. ramosa Beadle & F. E. Boynton, Biltmore Bot. Stud. 1:8. 

 pi. 2. 1901. 

 Dry rock outcrops, tattnall (1855) and dodge. Fl. June. 

 Occurs also in Johnson County, near the inland edge of 

 our territory. 

 Endemic or nearly so. (See Bull. Torrey Club, 32 : 170. 1905 ; 

 Torreya, 5:114. 1905.) 

 M. graminifolia (Walt.) Small, Bull. Torrey Club, 25:482. 1898. 

 Moist pine-barrens, not rare, coffee, irwin (1416), berrien, 

 colquitt, thomas (1180). Fl. July-Sept. Not known 

 farther inland, but extends well down into the flat pine- 

 barren region. 

 North Carolina to northern Florida and Louisiana, in the 

 pine-barrens. 



ACTINOSPERMUM Ell., Sk. 2:448. 1823. 

 A. angustifolium (Pursh) T. & G., FL 2:389. 1842. 



Baldwinia multiflora Nutt., Gen. 2: 176. 1818. 



Sand-hills and sand-hammocks; frequent from bulloch to 

 coffee (dp/) and the northeastern corner of berrien. Fl. 

 September. Inland to Laurens County (opposite Dublin), 

 and along the Canoochee, Altamaha, Satilla, and Little 

 Satilla Rivers well down into the flat country. 



Also known from several stations in Florida, and on the coast 

 of Alabama. 



