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Jepson Field Book Transcriptions · Jepson Herbarium

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40_8
Berkeley, June 6, 1923.
- "I found that practically all the timber on Big Pine Creek was blown down, presumably by the storm of Feb.11. The entire area above the second falls is a complete wreck. At least 75% of all the Jeffrey Pine is down. I estimate that in a distance of 1 1/2 miles 700 mature Jeffrey Pine trees were blown down; these had an average diameter of 38 incles and contained 4 or 5 logs per tree." - Forest Supervisor Jones, Inyo Forest. (Cal. Dist. News Letter, 4: no. 21, 25 May 1925).
- Sudden fall of limbs of Quercus lobata. See letter to W. S. Horne, June 1923.
- Davidson, A. He send an Eryngium scrap to Parish for det. [determination] and says it comes from Palm Sprs. [Springs]. Parish sends scrap to me and writes his doubts of loc. [location] to him. See Davidson's letter [cont. p. 15
40_9
Mt. Diablo, June 10, 1923.
No. 9983. Quercus wislizenii A. DC.
A thick-headed round-crowned tree resting on the ground; at the Sulphur Wash or spring, head of a fork of Marsh Creek near the divide from Clayton.
No. 9984. Aesculus californica Nutt.
The buckeyes were in wonderful bloom. To see these great crowns of the trees and the smaller ones of the shrubs, broad, rounded, swelling with hundreds of great flowering spikes - was suffiecient to transform the country to a degree.
No. 9988. Papaver heterophyllum = Stylomecon heterophuyllum
Head of Marsh Creek.
No. 9986. Brodiaea laxa = Tritelia
Shade form; fls. smaller than the form of the open in blue adobe, deep blue, the nerves inside perianth at base slightly wing-
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