— II — 



Mountain by Pollard or Maxon in 1900, and along the 

 Etowah River near Cartersville by C. L. Boynton (see 

 BiUmare Bot. Stud. 1: 147. 1902). 



Asplenium ebeneum Ait. In dry or damp shaded 

 places, widely distributed. Common in the upper half 

 of the State, but rather rare in the coastal plain. Reported 

 from the vicinity of Savannah by Mr. Gilbert {Fern Bull. 

 10: 1902), which is probably as near the coast as it gets 

 in the South. Evergreen. 



Asplenium parvulum Mart & Gal. (A. resiliens 

 Kunze.) On Cambrian, Carboniferous, Eocene, and 

 Lower Oligocene limestone in the western half of the 

 State, often accompanied by Pell 00a atro purpurea. Known 

 from Whitfield, Walker, Gordon, and Floyd Counties in 

 the Palaeozoic region and Macon, Randolph, and Decatur 

 Counties in the coastal plain. Also reported from the 

 vicinity of Tallulah Falls by Seymour (Torreya. 3: 21. 

 Feb., 1903), which is interesting, for that is many miles 

 from any limestone. Evergreen. 



Asplenium Trichomanes L. Collected by Mr. Wil- 

 son, in company with the writer, on Upper Silurian sand- 

 stone rocks along the summit of Rocky Face Mountain, 

 Whitfield County, July 21, 1900. Evergreen. 



Asplenium angustifolium Mx. I have seen this 

 only once, on moist shaded cliffs of Devonian shale near 

 the north end of Pigeon Mountain, Walker County, where 

 Mr. Wilson secured specimens on August 3, 1900. (See 

 Bull Torr. Bot. Club. 28:461. 1901.) 



Asplenium montanum Willd. Collected by both Mr. 

 Wilson and myself at the same time and place as A. Tri- 

 chomanes. Also in the vicinity of Tallulah Falls by 

 Small in 1893 and Seymour in 1901, where I have seen it 

 too. Said by Kunze to have been collected in Georgia 

 by Beyrich. Evergreen. 



Asplenium Bradleyj D. C. Eaton. On granite and 

 sandstone rocks among the mountains of Middle and 

 Northwest Georgia, ( )n and near Stone Mountain it has 

 been collected by Dr. Small (Bull. Ton: Bot. Club, 21 115, 

 16. 1894) and Mr. Wilson (Same, 28: 461. 1901). Mr. 



