72 GEOLOGY OF OHIO. 



Notices rarity or profusion of blossoms according to deficiency or 

 abundance of moisture and occurrence of new and rare plants to the 

 county. 



1890. 



A Catalogue of the Uncultivated Flowering Plants growing on the 

 Ohio State University grounds, by Moses Craig, in the Bulletin of the 

 Ohio Agr. Experiment Station, Technical Series, Vol. I, No. 2, May, 

 1890, pp. 49-110. 



The catalogue proper is preceded by an Introduction, I/imits of the 

 flora and its physical characters, Geology of the farm, Notes on the 

 climate, Extent and beauty of our flora, Time of blooming of plants, 

 maps, classification, statistics of the catalogue, etc., pp. 49-61. The 

 number of species and varieties enumerated is 468. In nearly every case 

 they are accompanied by full notes as to occurrence, abundance, etc. 



A preliminary List of the Plants of Franklin county, Ohio, prepared 

 for the Columbus Horticultural Society, by Aug. D. Selby and Moses 

 Craig, M. S. Committee on Botany for 1890. 



A pamphlet of nineteen pages, three of which (3-5) contain the 

 Introduction, twelve (7-18) include the neatly printed list — the genera in 

 black-faced type arranged alphabetically under the orders, and the species 

 alphabetically arranged under the genera — and the last page (19) gives a 

 summary of added and introduced plants. The list contains 1,002 

 plants, being an addition of 223 to Sullivant's Catalogue published fifty 

 years before. 



Mycologic Observa 1 ions, I. (January, 1890), by A. P. Morgan, Bot- 

 anical Gazette, Vol. XV, No. 4, April, 1890, p. 34. 



Notices many fungi to be seen in Winter, as Agaricus Sepridas, 

 Tremellas, Schizophyllum, Menispora, Aithrosporum, Bactridium, Naema- 

 telia, Stereum, Dacrymyces. 



Supplementary I/ist to the Plants of Ohio preliminary to a complete 

 catalogue of the flora of the State, by William R. Eazenby and W. C. 

 Werner, Department of Botany and Horticulture, Ohio State University, 

 Columbus, Ohio, 1890. 



Native species are printed in heavy faced type, those introduced in 

 small capitals. "The total number of plants, including both species and 

 varieties, enumerated in this list, is one hundred and twenty-three. Of 

 this number sixteen are cryptogams. Deducting these there are one 

 hundred and thirteen indigenous and sixty-four introduced Phaenogams." 



