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Field Notes, 1912, Part 3_084

Item

Raymond J. Pool Field Notes and Records
Title
Field Notes, 1912, Part 3_084
Alternative Title
Field Notes, 1912, Part 3
Date
1912
Creator
Raymond J. Pool
Description
Raymond J. Pool Field Notes
Identifier
120712
Transcription
84 59 along such rivers and smaller streams where the soil is always wet. The association then as a rule presents a bilateral form in contrast to the diffuse or meadow form of the above two associations. I have included under this association the "Spring Marsh Type" and the "Spring Brook Types" of Pound and Clements , because it is very impossible to differentiate with constancy between these two types except in mere position. Physiographically and ecologically they are identical. "The most of the streams of the Sand Hills rise in a meadow like area which is well provided with springs. In many such places the meadow conditions and vegetation is as I have described it above. Sometimes there are differences introduced by the presence of Impatiens biflora in abundance and the Willow Hubs. Epilobium lineare and E. adenocaulon . Here also occur Rumex britannica , R. hydropiperoides , Helenium autumnale , and Cicuta occidentalis . But these are likewise very common members of the meadow associations described above. In the wetter situations such species as Mimulus jamesii , Berula
Rights
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