240 HARPER 



corner of berrien. Fl. April-May. Also coastward in 

 Pierce, Charlton, and Camden Counties, and reported from 

 adjacent Florida. 



A. angustifolia Gray, Bot. Gaz. n : 163. 1886. 



Dry pine-barrens and sand-hills; not common, tattnall, 



MONTGOMERY, COFFEE, WILCOX, BERRIEN, COLQUITT. Fl. 



May. Inland to Lee, Early, and Decatur Counties in the 

 Lower Oligocene region (especially common around Bain- 

 bridge), and coastward to Cumberland Island and adjacent 

 Florida. 



RANUNCULACEjE. 



Represented by only three species, none of them common. 

 THALICTRUM L., Sp. PL 545. 1753. 

 T. macrostylum (Shuttl.) Small & Heller, Mem. Torrey Club 

 3 l :S. 1892. 

 Montgomery: Bluff along Oconee River near Ochwalkee, 

 July 1, 1903 (1867). More frequent in the lime-sink region. 

 Western North Carolina to Middle Florida. 



CLEMATIS L., Sp. PI. 543. 17 53- 

 C. reticulata Walt., Fl. Car. 156. 1788. 



coffee: Lower slopes of sand-hills of Seventeen Mile Creek 

 near Douglas, July 30, 1902. {1463). Also known farther 

 inland, in Sumter and Marion Counties. 

 South Carolina to Florida, Arkansas, and Texas, in the coastal 

 plain. 



C. crispa L., 1. c. 



Swamps; rare, tattnall: Along Ohoopee River; colquitt: 



Branch-swamp near Moultrie. Fl. spring and summer. 

 Widely distributed in the Southeastern United States. 



CARYOPHYLLACEjE. 

 ARENARIA L., Sp. PI. 423. 1753. 

 A. Caroliniana Walt., Fl. Car. 141. 1788. 

 A. squarrosa Mx., Fl. 1 1273. 1873. 

 On sand-hills; not rare in the eastern part of our territory. 



