252 HARPER 



MYRICACE^J. 

 MYRICA L., Sp. PI. 1024. 1753. 

 M. Carolinensis Mill., Gard. Diet. ed. 8. 1768. (Bayberry.) 

 (Included in M. cerifera by nearly all 19th century authors.) 

 Sand-hill bogs, non-alluvial swamps, moist pine-barrens, etc. 



BULLOCH, EMANUEL (982), MONTGOMERY, COFFEE, IRWIN, 



dooly, colquitt. Fl. spring. Pretty well scattered over 



South Georgia. 

 Nova Scotia to Lake Erie in the glaciated region, south to 



northern Florida and eastern Louisiana in the coastal plain. 



(See Rhodora 7:74. 1905.) 

 Leaf-anatomy described by Kearney, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 



5 : 294. 1900. 



M. cerifera L., 1. c. Myrtle. 



bulloch : Rich woods along Ogeechee River near Echo (oppo- 

 site Rocky Ford), March 31 and April 4, 1904. berrien: 

 Low rich woods west and southwest of Tifton, Sept. 29 and 

 30, 1902 (seepp.no, 111). Fl. March. Quite abundant near 

 the coast, and scattered pretty well over South Georgia, 

 reaching its best development probably in the Cretaceous 

 region. This species seems almost always to indicate the 

 absence of the Lafayette formation. 



Maryland to South Florida, Arkansas, and Texas, in the 

 coastal plain. 



Leaf-anatomy briefly described by Kearney, Contr. U. S. Nat. 

 Herb. 5 1294. 1900. 



M. pumila [Mx.] Small, Bull. Torrey Club 23 : 126. 1896. 



Usually in dry or intermediate pine-barrens, screven, eman- 



UEL {992), TATTNALL, MONTGOMERY, TELFAIR, APPLING, 



coffee, colquitt. Common in the flat country toward 

 the coast, and extending inland to Sumter, Lee, and Early 

 Counties in the Lower Oligocene region. 

 North Carolina to Florida and Mississippi, in the pine-barrens. 

 Also in upper Alabama (Mohr). 



JUGLANDACE^). 

 HICORIA Raf., Med. Rep. II. 5 1352. 1808. "Hickory." 

 H. aquatica (Mx. f.) Britton, Bull. Torrey Club 15 : 284. if 



