Page:The Living Flora of West Virginia and The Fossil Flora of West Virginia.pdf/353

Rh WEST VIRGINIA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY

329

mens of very large growth in Randolph Co., especially on Channel ridge where the species grows very tall, and at Pickens where specimens were measured from 3 to 6 ft. in diameter. F. PennsylvaniCa Marsh. Red or Black Ash. (F. pubescens Lam. ). Low grounds. Randolph : along Tygart's Valley River. Upshur : near Lawrence. Fayette : near Nuttallburg (Nutt all). Wood : along the Little Kanawha River. Mason : neat Point Pleasant. F. lanceolata Borck. Green Ash. (F. viridis Michx.). Along streams. Summers : near Hinton. Frequent throughout the State. F. nigra Marsh. Black Ash. ( (F. sambucifolia Lam.). Wet woods. Wirt : along Straight Creek. Fayette : neai Nuttallburg, rare (Nuttall). Randolph: on Point Mountain. Webster : Buffalo Bull Mountain. Monongalia : near Ice's Ferry. Summers : Hinton. CHIONANTHUS L. C. Virginica L. Fringe Tree. River banks. Jackson : near Sandy and Ripley. Fayette : near Nuttallburg, plentiful (Nuttall) ; along Gauley River near Gauley Mountains (Millspaugh) ; near Thurmond (Hggleston 5560) ; near Hawks Nest (Holton) in fruit. Summers : near Hinton. Monongalia : along Tibb's Run. LIGUSTRUM L. L. vulgare L. Privet. Escaped from cultivation to waste places. Kanawha: near Charleston (Barnes). Randolph: near Pickens (H. H. Smith 2024). LOGANIACEAE. CYNOCTONUM J. G. Gmel. (Mitreola R. Br. 1810). C. Mitreola (L.) Britten. (M. petiolata T. & G.) Damp soiL Fayette: near Nuttallburg; rare (Nuttall).