REVIEW OF THE GEOLOGY OF FLORIDA 
135 
Forsaith, Carl C. 
'A report on some allochthonous peat deposits of Florida: Bot Gazette, 
Vol. 62, No. 1, pp. 32-52, July, 1916. 
Gunter, Herman (with Sellards, E. H .) 
The fuller’s earth deposits of Gadsden County, Florida. With notes on 
similar deposits found elswhere in the State. Florida State Geol. Survey, 
2nd. Ann. Rept., pp. 253-291, 4 pis., 2figs., 1909. 
The artesian water supply of eastern Florida: Florida State Geol. Sur¬ 
vey, 3rd Ann Rept, pp. 77-195, 16 figs., 1910. 
The underground water supply of west central and west Florida. Florida 
State Geol. Survey, 4th Ann. Rept. pp. 81-155, 4 pis., 12 figs,, 1912. 
Artesian water supply of eastern and southern Florida: Florida State 
Geol. Survey, 5th Ann. Rept., pp. 103-290, 5 pis., 17 figs., 1 map (in pocket), 
1913. 
Hall, Archibald A. 
Analysis of a Florida clay: Durham, Univ. Philos. Soc., Vol. 4, pp. 228- 
229, 1912. 
Harper, Roland M. 
Preliminary report on the peat deposits of Florida. Florida State Geol. 
Survey, 3rd Ann. Rept., pp. 197-375, 13 pis., 14 figs., 1910. 
Chondrophora virgata in West Florida. Torreya 11:98, fig. 1. April, 1911. 
Early spring aspects of the coastal plain vegetation of South Carolina, 
Georgia, and northeastern Florida. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 38:223-236. “May” 
(June), 1911. 
A quest for the Wakulla volcano. Florida Review 6:215-224, with 3 half¬ 
tones. Sept., 1911. 
The river-bank vegetation of the lower Apalachicola, and a new prin¬ 
cipal illustrated thereby. Torreya 11:225-234, fig. 1. Nov., 1911, 
Notes on the Distribution of the southeastern salamanders (Geomys Tuza 
and allies). Science 11:35:115-119, Jan. 19, 1912. 
The coniferous forests of eastern North America. Pop. Sci. Monthly 
85 ^338-361, with 16 half-tones not numbered. Oct., 1914. 
(Topography, streams and springs, lakes and ponds, coast and harbors, 
climate, vegetation flora, fauna and forest products of Florida.) New Inter¬ 
national Encyclopaedia, Second Edition, 7:7o6-709, 713. Dodd, Mead & Co., 
New York, Dec. 1914. 
Harshberger, John W. 
The vegetation of South Florida, south of 27 30' north, exclusive of the 
Florida Keys. Trans. Wagner Free Inst. Sci. (Philadelphia) 7: 49-189, with 
map, 2 text-figures and 10 plates. Dec. 1914. 
Hay, Oliver P. 
The fossil turtles of North America. Carnegie Inst., Publication No. 75, 
1908. 
