190 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-13TH ANNUAL REPORT P. (2137). Soil with larger shell fragments, near inner side of Long Key, about 2 miles north of Pass-a-Grille. Depth 6 inche.s. Middle Florida Hamnmock Belt Q. (2104). Cream-colored sand with humus, or san-dy hammock (mapped as "Leon sand") about 6 miles south of Ocala, with vegetation nearly all evergreen (fig. 39). Depth 8 inches. R. .(2105). Red oak woods, with no evergreens, about I'2 miles e. s. e. of Ocala (fig. 41). Depth 9 inches. S. (2106). Semicalcareous hammock with many evergreens, about a mile southeast of Ocala (fig. 3). Depth 8 inches. T (2139). Calcareous high hammock with few evergreens, about 22 miles south of Ocala. Depth 6 inches. This soil appeared to consist mostly of limestone fragments and black humus. U. (2107). Hammock with trees mostly hackberry, on hillside about 2 mile south of McIntosh, Marion County. Depth 6 inches. Soil black and waxy, with many small rock fragments, though no outcrops of limestone were observed in the vicinity. Hernando Hammock Belt V (2134). Long-leaf pine woods with little underbrush, on hillside about '2 mile north of Brooksville. Depth 6 inches. Soil blackish, and quite different from that of typical high pine land. V. (2135). Level forest in rather low ground about a mile north of Brooksville, with sweet gum, ironwood, etc. Depth 6 inches. This appears loamy and rather retentive of moisture, but when dry looks much like ordinary cream-colored sand. Flatwoods, TfVestern Division X (2138). Rich hammock with dogwood, lin, etc., on hillside about 2 miles north of Fort Meade. Idepth 9 inches. A chocolate loam, with many rock fragments presumably derived from underlying pebble phosphate beds. Flatwoods, Eastern Division Y (2109). Comparat'vely dry prairie with scattered sawpalmetto and various herbs, about 7Y2 miles west- of Melbourne,