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De I. VNER VEW D Forest Trees of the Pacific Slope

De I. VNER VEW D Forest Trees of the Pacific Slope

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180 FOREST TREES OF THE PACIFIC SLOPE.<br />

nor<strong>the</strong>rn Arizona; probably also in Black Hills (South Dakota) and Oklahoma; generally<br />

above 5,000 feet elevation, except near coast. Limits <strong>of</strong> range still imperfectly<br />

known.<br />

BRITISH COLU-MBIA AND ALBERTA. Eastern foothills <strong>of</strong> Rocky Mountains westward<br />

through sou<strong>the</strong>rn British Columbia (here in Columbia River Valley, near Donald, shores<br />

<strong>of</strong> Kamloops, Frantois, and o<strong>the</strong>r lakes), to <strong>Pacific</strong> Ocean; here on heights near Vancouver<br />

(British Columbia), and at Esquinalt and <strong>De</strong>parture Bay on Vancouver Island,<br />

and on small islands in Georgia Strait. A tree juniper found as far north as Stikine<br />

River, on Telegraph Creek, just east <strong>of</strong> coast range, is probably this species.<br />

F(u. 70. JIniperus scopuloruca.<br />

WASITINOToN.-Throughout eastern part below 5,000 feet ; reappears west <strong>of</strong> Cascades<br />

In arid localities, as San JIuan, Orcas, Sdcia, and Fidalgo islands (Puget Sound),<br />

Olympic Mountains, and Everett (Snohomish County). Locally noted, east <strong>of</strong> Cascades,<br />

at Sentinel Bluffs (on Columbia River), Peshastin and Wenache (on WVenache River),<br />

near Lake Chelan from Lake level (1,108 feet) to 1,800 feet, at tone (Stevens County),<br />

and at Spokane.<br />

OREGON. Eastern part, probably including Wenaha, Blue, and Powder River and<br />

sou<strong>the</strong>astern mountains. I.ocally noted in WVallula Gorge <strong>of</strong> Columbia River, below<br />

Juniper Canyon (ITmatilla County), at 327 feet; southwestern Blue Mountains, between<br />

Ontario and Liarney, above 3,600 feet; western slope <strong>of</strong> Steins Mountains, at<br />

4,800 to 6,500 feet.<br />

The detailed range <strong>of</strong> this tree in <strong>the</strong> Rockies and eastward will be dealt<br />

with in a later bulletin.

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