ALTAMAHA GRIT REGION OF GEORGIA 223 



Sand-hills and very dry pine-barrens; not abundant. 



BULLOCH (907, 914), EMANUEL, TATTNALL. Fl. June. 



Also in Richmond (A. Cuthbert), Johnson, and Sumter 

 Counties. 

 North Carolina to Florida (?), in the coastal plain, mostly in 

 the pine-barrens. 



T. intonsum (Sheldon) Rydb., 1. c. 



Astragalus villosus Mx., not Gueldenst. 



bulloch : Dry pine-barrens near Bloys, June 11, 1901 (872). 

 Also in Laurens and Dooly Counties, in the Lower Oligocene 

 region, where it flowers in March and April. 



South Carolina to northern Florida and Alabama, in the coastal 

 plain. 



WISTARIA Nutt.,Gen. 2 : 115. 1818. 

 W. frutescens (L.) Poir., Tab. Encyc. 3 1674. 1823. 



Branch- and creek-swamps; not common, emanuel (2092), 

 tattnall, telfair, wilcox. Fl. April-Aug. Probably 

 more common in the upper third of the coastal plain. 

 Virginia to Florida and westward, in the coastal plain. 



CRACCA L., Sp. PI. 752. 1753. 

 Tephrosia Pers., Syn. 2 :328. 1803. 

 C. Virginiana L., 1. c. "Devil's Shoestring." 



Dry pine-barrens and sand-hills, abundant throughout. 

 Grows nearly all over the state, even on mountain-summits 

 in Northwest Georgia (Pigeon Mountain, 2329 feet), but 

 less common north of the fall-line. 

 Widely distributed in the Eastern United States, perhaps 

 usually as a weed northward. 



C. hispidula (Mx.) Kuntze, Rev. 1 : 175. 1891. 



Intermediate pine-barrens; rare, bulloch (849), berrien. 

 Associated at both places with Euphorbia eriogonoides . 

 Fl. May- June. Also in Chatham and Bryan Counties. 

 Virginia to Florida and Mississippi, in the pine-barrens. 

 INDIGOFERA L., Sp. PL 751. 1753. 

 I. Caroliniana Walt., Fl. Car. 187. 1788. 



Sand-hills, hammocks, etc. bulloch, Montgomery, dodge, 



