APRIL, 1900. 
127 
NATURAL HISTORY NOTES. 
BMo^raphkal Notes on Wisconsin Forests. BY E. BRUNCKEN. 
The following does not lay claims to entire completeness, but as 
fai as it goes may be of use to students. The note is made from 
the botanical rather than the economic standpoint, although 
several of the publications entered contain much "information re- 
garding the economic conditions also. The scantiness of the list 
is evidence of the fact that very little is really known in an ac- 
curate manner about the biological relations of the forests of the 
state. 
Brunckp:n, Ernest. 
Notes on the Distribution of Some Trees and Shrubs in the 
A^icinity of Milwaukee. 
Bulletin of Wisconsin Natural History Society, January, 
1900, pp. 31-42. 
Bruncken, Ernest. 
Some Remarkable Trees in the Vicinity of Milwaukee. 
Bulletin of Wisconsin Natural History Society, January, 
1900, pp. 43-45. 
Bruncken, Ernest. 
The Trees of Wisconsin. Milwaukee Sentinel, Special Carni- 
val Edition, April 21, 1898. (Biological and Historical.) 
Chamberlain, T. C, 
Native Vegetation. Chapter HI.. Geology of Eastern Wis- 
consin. Report of Geological Survey, Vol. H. (Attempts a 
classification according to zones of distribution.) 
With map in acompanying atlas. 
Hoy, B. R. 
Notes on the Woods of Wisconsin. 
Transactions Wisconsin State Agricultural Society. Vol. 11., 
pp. ,419 ct sequ. 1852. 
Lap HAM, LA. 
The Forest Trees of Wisconsin. 
Transactions of Wisconsin State Agricultural Society. \o\. 
IV., pp. 195 ct scqu. 
Lapham, Crocker and Knapp. 
Report on the Disastrous Effects of the Destruction of Forest 
Trees. 
