omit it from their list, published in 1892,2 but it is mentioned by Cardot, in 19I I, as follows: orbicularis Bruch.-District federal Mexico (Wagner; herb. C. Warnstorf). Europe, Asie, Afrique mediterraneenne, region magellanique., which is the only available reference to the plant in the Western Hemisphere. In view of the above facts it is interesting to record G. orbicularis as one of the characteristic species of the moss flora of Southern Arizona. It grows abundantly, at altitudes below 2500 ft., on ledgy steep banks of dry washes within a radius of fifty miles from Tucson, where the deep broad black-green mats contrast strongly with the smaller grey-green cushions of Grimmia pulvinata. The field distinctions are so obvious and unmistakable ihn this limited area that it is hard to understand how such a representative species as G. orbicularis has hitherto escaped detection. It is reasonable to suppose that it ranges more widely through the Lower Sonoran Zone and down along the west coast of Mexico, but our meager knowledge of the moss flora of these arid southwestern regions confines this to a mere supposition. Through the courtesy of Mr. E. B. Chamberlain, it has been possible to make detailed comparisons with European exsiccati, and similar comparisons very kindly made by Dr. H. N. Dixon indicate that the agreement between our Arizona plants and G. orbicularis of Europe is essentially complete. Apart from the field characters mentioned above, the more minute distinctions of cucullate calyptra, unistratose lamina, and elongated median basal leaf-cells separate this plant clearly from Grimmia pulvinata, the only other species with which it might be confused. BUSHKILL, PIKE COUNTY, PA.