Alphabetical Index to Localities. 



Albion, Camden County; Pine Barrens: three and one-half miles west of 

 Atco. Scrub and pine land, with pine and cedar swamps to the 

 south. 



Allaire, Monmouth County; Pine Barrens: just west of the marshy shore 

 meadows, north of Lakewood, southeast of Freehold. 



Alloway, Salem County; Delaware Valley: good, well-cultivated country, 

 with scrub pine and other woodland surroundings. 



Almonesson, Camden County; southeast of Woodbury, on Almonesson 

 Creek. Low, somewhat marshy and scrubby land, with a consider- 

 able pond. 



Alpine, Bergen County; Highlands: on the Hudson, about four miles 

 south of the State line. Rocky, wooded country. 



Ancora, Camden County; Pine Barrens: about three miles north of 

 Winslow. Scrub t^nd swamp, with cranberry bogs on the Pump 

 branch. 



Andover, Sussex County, about five miles south of Newton; Appalachian, 

 just beyond the Highlands: hilly, wooded country, with extremes of 

 a little over 700 feet. Small ponds filled by little brooks near by. 



Anglesea: see Five-Mile Beach. 



Arlington, Piedmont Plains: or Arlington Meadows, Delaware Valley, 

 Essex County. A short distance east of Newark, at the edge of the 

 Hackensack meadows, where most of the collecting was actually 

 done. 



Asbury Park, Monmoutli County; Delaware Valley and Maritime: means 

 generally the ocean front and washed up material; but there is good 

 collecting ground in the coniferous woodland west of the town. 



Ashland, Camden County; Delaware Valley. Three miles east of Had- 

 donfield on the Camden and Atlantic R. R. 



Atco, Camden County; Pine Barrens. Scrub land; mostly conifers, light 

 sandy soil, cedar and cranberry swamps. 



Atlantic City, Atlantic County; Coastal and Maritime. On an island 

 made up of sand dunes, with reedy grasses rising from the ocean 

 front to a central l>ack-bone and dropping off at the west to a broad 

 marsh which becomes flooded at unusually high water. Much of the 

 collecting was done along the shore in times past, of material washed 

 up by the sea, and little has been done of late years. 



Atlantic County. Means usually the pine barrens. 



Atlantic Highlands, Monmouth County: Delaware Valley. A high ridge 

 at the land end of Sandy Hook, overlooking the ocean and Raritan 

 Bay. Rolling scrub land with little high wood and much bush, merg- 

 ing into> swampy meadows back of the ridge and along, shore. 



Atsion, Burlington County; Pine Barrens. Surrounded by cranberry and 

 cedar swamps, on Atsion Creek. 



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