82 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-I3TH ANNUAL REPORT are printed in the text instead of on special paper for the sake of economy, and also to bring them as near as possible. to the corresponding text and save the trouble of fitting two or three on one plate. The map used herewith (fig. 2) is too small to show fine details, but larger maps showing the towns, railroads, etc., are easily accessible. REGIONAL MAP CENTRAL FLORIDA 2. GUJLF RAMINOK RE&.ION4 LIME-SNK REI / & RERRANRO HAMMOCK BELT-L EAST COAST STRIP Fig~ \Iap showingo boundaries of the regions described herein, and various other geographical features. Scale about 1:2,50O,000 or 40 miles to the inch. For various reasons, chiefly lack of time, no bibliography has been preparedl for this report, but thos'e in the First, Third, Sixt? and Twelfth Annual Reports contain references to numerous important works dealing with central Florida or the whofe state, and a few other references are scattered through this report in the form of footnotes. The natural resources of an area of about 1,ooc square miles around Ocala, with special reference to geology, vege-