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Jepson Field Book Transcriptions · Jepson Herbarium

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40_136
Berkeley, Oct. 25, 1923.
Chas. [Charles] L. Camp
Dept. Geology
Local 162
on Mus. Vert. Zool. [ museum vertebrate zoology]
has just been in with a translation of Cremeno's voyage, a Spanish navigator who touched Pt. Reyes 16 years after Drake. The food of the natives is referred to: hazel nuts, seed like sesamum, out of which bread was made, and a thistle, probably Cirsium edule.
- Oct. 25, 1923.
[Cont. from p 135] being somewhat dovetailed into each other, the plumule and caulicle lying on one side between them of course.
40_137
Mt. Tamalpais, 27 Oct. '23.
No. 10,300. Salix scouleriana Barr. [crossed out: flavescens Nutt.]
Tree near Mill Valley in canon [canyon] bottom, 3 ft. 1 1/2 in. circ. at 4 ft. I estimate it as 55 ft. h. The trunk was about 20 ft in height, straight, looking more like a Tan Oak trunk than a willow trunk. The leaves of my specimen are from a crown sprout. Otherwise no foliage was in reach. The foliage in the crown seemed small and in shape like the bush of our Berkeley Hills.
No. 10,301. Cheilanthes siliguosa Maxon (DET. TRYON, JR. 1958) [crossed out: Pellaea densa]
Rocky slope.
No. 10,302. Rhododendron occidentale
Along streams in canon [canyon] bottoms. Very shady. Long internodes! Small trees 15 to 26 ft. high! Internodes on main upright shoots or branches in top of tree 9 to 18 in. long. See p. 138
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