The Native Flowers And Ferns of the United States in Their Botanical Horticultu

Cover The Native Flowers And Ferns of the United States in Their Botanical Horticultu
The Native Flowers And Ferns of the United States in Their Botanical Horticultu
Thomas Meehan
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W. Wildberger. It is, therefore, probable from these several recent discoveries in widely separated localities that it will yet be found in many other places, and the probability will give increased interest to fern explorations.
Miss Julia Tutvviler finds the plant in considerable quantity in her location, and, in a letter dated April 15th, 1S79, to the writer of this, she thus describes her experience with it: "Our resi- dence in Alabama is in latitude 32° 47' north, longitude 87° 45' west, e
...ight miles from the Black Warrior river. The black- lands, or cotton-lands, formerly prairies, covered with cane and with cedar-hummocks near there, lie about fifteen miles south of us. Where we reside the soil is either red clay, or a mixture of sand and gravel, except in the creek and river bottoms. The face of the country is rolling, covered with hills from one hun- dred to two hundred feet above the level of the sea. We find no stones here except conglomerate, or 'pudding-stone, ' as it is familiarly called.

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