VEGETATION TYPES. 
Fig. 68.—Swampy spot in low calcareous hammock 1V2 miles south of Wild¬ 
wood, with cypress, air-plant ( Tillandsia tenuifolia), Saururus, etc. May 17, 1910. 
Fig. 69.—Swamp a few miles west of Wildwood, with trees mostly black 
gum. March 10, 1914. (This view is very near the edge of the swamp, where 
there was no calciphile vegetation in evidence, but it is doubtless more typical 
farther in, for this swamp borders Lake Panasoffkee, a rather calcareous body 
of water, and is designated on the soil map as “swamp, marl subsoil phase.”) 
Fig. 70.—-Western edge of short-leaf pine and cabbage palmetto bottoms 
(“Fellowship clay”) about 2 miles northeast of Silver Spring. The perspective 
of the railroad track shows plainly that it is lower than the pine land in the 
foreground. March 11, 1914. 
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