ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 211 



tattnall, coffee, berrien. Pretty well scattered over 

 the state. 

 New Jersey (?) to Florida and Texas. 

 R. radicans L., 1. c. Poison Oak. 



Creek- and river-swamps and other damp shaded places. 

 screven, telfair, coffee, berrien. Fl. May. More com- 

 mon farther inland. 

 Widely distributed in the Eastern United States, apparently 

 mostly a weed in the North. 



EMPETRACEiE. 

 CERATIOLA Mx, Fl. 2 1222. 1803. 

 C. ericoides Mx., 1. c. "Rosemary." 



For illustrations see Curt. Bot. Mag., 54: pi. 2758. 1827; 

 Bull. Torrey Club] 30 : 284. /. 2. 1903, and pi. ocxi, f. 2. of 

 this volume. 

 emanuel : Sand-hammock on Fifteen Mile Creek near Rose- 

 mary Church, June 28, 1901 (975). Known also from the 

 fall-line sand-hills in Richmond County, where it grows 

 larger and more luxuriantly; and reported from the sand- 

 hills of Brier Creek, at the northwestern corner of Burke 

 County, by Croom (Am. Jour. Sci. 26:315. 1834. See also 

 Bull. Torrey Club 32 : 160. 169, 1905.) 

 South Carolina to central Florida and Mississippi, in the 

 coastal plain. Our plant bears a striking superficial re- 

 semblance to species of Darwinia and Calycothrix, two 

 Myrtaceous genera of western Australia. 

 EUPHORBIACE^. 

 EUPHORBIA L., Sp. PI. 450. 1753. 

 E. Floridana Chapm., Fl. 401. i860. 



Only in the extreme southwest end of our territory, decatur : 



High sand-hills beyond Recovery, Aug. 14, 1903 (1931). 

 Known otherwise only from West Florida and southwestern 

 Alabama. (See Bull. Torrey Club 32 : 162. 1905.) 

 E. corollata L., Sp. PI. 450. 1753. 



Sand-hills, dry pine-barrens, etc. ; not common. Montgomery 



COFFEE (1458), IRWIN, BERRIEN, COLQUITT, THOMAS. Fl. 



