. Economic botany of Alabama . Fig. 10. Pi)ius glabra, about two feet in diameter and 75 feet tall, in Conecuh River bottoms northwest of Troy, Pike County. December 11, 1905. sweet guni, and other hardwoods. It is strictly confined to the coastal plain, and scarcely extends north of latitude 33" in any part of its range. 6A (r). One or two small trees a little south of Maplesville, perhaps of recent introduction. Native along a small creek about six miles east of Wetumpka, and along creeks in the northern part of Macon County. Sev- eral years ago some pine cones from a peaty stratum in a
. Economic botany of Alabama . Fig. 10. Pi)ius glabra, about two feet in diameter and 75 feet tall, in Conecuh River bottoms northwest of Troy, Pike County. December 11, 1905. sweet guni, and other hardwoods. It is strictly confined to the coastal plain, and scarcely extends north of latitude 33" in any part of its range. 6A (r). One or two small trees a little south of Maplesville, perhaps of recent introduction. Native along a small creek about six miles east of Wetumpka, and along creeks in the northern part of Macon County. Sev- eral years ago some pine cones from a peaty stratum in a cut near Mountain Creek, Chilton Co., were referred by Prof. E. W. Berry to this species. If that is correct it must have ranged a little farther north in Pliocene or Pleistocene time than it does now.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectforestsandforestry