— 15 — 



Coffee, Berrien, Colquitt, Decatur and Ware Counties. 

 Also in Meriwether County in the Piedmont region, an 

 exceptional station (see Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 30:294. 

 I903)- 



Lycopodium Carolixiaxum L. Often with one of the 

 preceding, but rather rare and less conspicuous. Sumter, 

 Emanuel. Tattnall, Coffee. Irwin. Colquitt. Decatur and 

 Charlton Counties. 



Lycopodium cernuum L. In moist railroad cuts, in 

 the southern part of Randolph County. Oct. 28. 1902. 

 Evidently introduced. (See Torrcya. 3:90. June. 1903). 



SELAGIXELLACEJE. 



Selagixella rupestris Spring. On granite rocks. 

 Kennesaw Mountain. Cobb County (see Bull. Torr. Bot. 

 Club. 28:461. 1901), and near the fall-line in Muscogee 

 County. Both of these stations seem to be farther south 

 than any others known in the Eastern United States, also 

 collected on Currahee Mountain. Habersham County bv 

 Dr. Small. 



Selagixella arexicola Underw. I have found this 

 only on dry exposed outcrops of Altamaha Grit in Tatt- 

 nall County. (For a photograph of one of these places 

 see Torrcya. 4:140. Sept.. 1904). Mr. Curtiss has col- 

 lected it in " Dry sandy open ground, among sparse 

 herbage, near Bainbridge." Decatur County. 



Selagixella acaxthoxota Underw. On sand-hills 

 along the Altamaha River and its tributaries in Tattnall, 

 Montgomery and Liberty Counties, in Southeast Georgia. 

 Also on an Altamaha Grit outcrop in Dooly Countv. 



Selagixella apus Spring. Mostly in damp woods or 

 meadows, not common. Whitfield and Walker Counties 

 in Northwest Georgia (Wilson). Clarke County in Mid- 

 dle Georgia, and several counties in the Northern and 

 Western part of the coastal plain. 



