FLORAS OF THE WORLD 205 



Ewing, C. 0., and Stafford, E. E. Botanicals of the Blue Ridge. Jour. Amer. 

 Pharm. Assoc. 8: 16-26. illus. 1919. 



Account of general features of region and of method of collecting crude drugs, 

 with enumeration of the more important species. The Blue Ridge, in western 

 North Carolina and Virginia, is the chief source of native botanic drugs in the 

 United States. 



House, H. D. Woody plants of western North Carolina. 34 p. 22.5 cm. 

 Darmstadt, 1913. 



Plant zones, list of endemic species ; annotated systematic list of trees, shrubs, 

 and woody vines. 



Kearney, T. H. The plant covering of Ocracoke Island ; a study in the ecology 

 of the North Carolina strand vegetation. Contrib. U. S. Natl. Herb. 5: 261-319. 

 fig. 33-50. 1900. 



Mainly ecological, but includes list of cellular and vascular plants ; bibliography. 

 (Hyde County.) 



Lewis, I. F. The vegetation of Shackleford Bank. Econ. Paper North Caro- 

 lina Geol. and Econ. Survey no. 46. 32 p. 11 pi. (incl. map). 1917. 



Topography, climate, plant formations, general features of flora, soil-binders, 

 etc. ; list of vascular plants. (A sand reef on coast between Beaufort Inlet and 

 Cape Lookout, Carteret County.) 



McAtee, W. L. Notes on the flora of Church's Island, North Carolina. Jour. 

 Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 35: 61-75. 1919. 



General features of flora ; annotated list of vascular plants collected by the 

 author. (Currituck County.) 



Memminger, E. R. A list of plants growing spontaneously in Henderson 

 County, N. C. Jour. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 30: 126-149. 1915. 



Unannotated list of vascular plants. 



Peattie, D. C. Flora of the Tryon region of North and South Carolina. An 

 annotated list of plants growing spontaneously in Polk County, North Carolina, 

 and adjacent parts of South Carolina, in Greenville and Spartanburg Counties. 

 Jour. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 44: 95-125, 141-229. 1928-29; 45: 59-100, 245- 

 290. 1929-30; 46: 129-160. 1931.— Additions, corrections and deletions . . . 

 I.e. 53:311-323. 1937. 



Botanical explorations, physiography, soils, climate; annotated list of 1,155 

 vascular plants. 



Small, J. K., and Heller, A. A. Flora of western North Carolina and con- 

 tiguous territory. Mem. Torrey Club 3: 1-36. 1892. 



Includes list of species collected by authors. (Mainly in Blue Ridge at Grand- 

 father Mountain, Table Rock, Blowing Rock, Stone Mountain, etc.) 



Wood, T. F., and McCarthy, Gerald. Wilmington flora ; a list of plants grow- 

 ing about Wilmington, N. C, with date of flowering. Jour. Elisha Mitchell Sci. 

 Soc. 3: 77-141. map. 1886. (Reprinted 69 p.) 



Partly annotated list of 1,217 vascular plants. (New Hanover County.) 



NORTH DAKOTA 



General 



Bergman, H. F. Flora of North Dakota. Bien. Rpt. Agr. Col. Survey North 

 Dakota 6 (1911-12): 151-372. [1918.] (Reprinted.) 



Botanical explorations, physiography, types of vegetation, etc. ; annotated list 

 of vascular plants, with keys. The 15-page index follows the index of the whole 

 volume, also two unnumbered pages of corrections. — For additions, see Metcalf, 

 F. P. Notes on North Dakota plants. Jour. Washington Acad. Sci. 10: 188-198. 

 1920. — Also Stevens, 0. A. New records and other notes on North Dakota plants. 

 Bui. Torrey Club 49: 93-105. 1922. 



Lunell, Joel. Enumerantur plantae Dakotae Septentrionalis vasculares, I-XI V. 

 Amer. Midi. Nat. 4: 152-165, 211-228, 229-244, 297-310, 355-366, 409-418, 419-431, 

 467^87, 503-517. 1915-16 ; 5: 1-13, 31-46, 55-71, 93-98, 233-241. 1917-18. 



Annotated list of 1,311 species and varieties. Remarkable for its nomenclature, 

 which recognizes no dividing line in 1753, but takes generic names from such 

 authors as Dioscorides, and binomials from Fuchs and others of like date. Many 

 of the largest Linnaean genera appear under unfamiliar and botanically inde- 

 fensible names, as Tessenia for Erigeron, Gunigunda for Eupatorium, and Eupa- 

 torium for Agrimonia. 



