788 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



1889. Redfield, J. H. Corema in New Jersey. Ton. Bull. 

 XVI, 193. 



1888. Britton, N. L. Viola tenella at Bridgeton, New Jersey. 

 Torr. Bull XV, 176. 



1889. RedEield, John H. Rediscovery of Corema Conradii in 

 Monmouth County, New Jersey. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. 

 Philadelphia, 1889. 135. 



1890. Britton, N. L. Nymphaea odorata rosea at Cape May. 

 Torr. Bull. XVII, 121. 



1890. Smith, J. B. Cranberry Culture in New Jersey. Gar- 

 den and Forest. 1890, 535. 



1890-1897. Treat, Mary. A series of popular accounts of 

 the Pine Barren Flora about Vineland, New Jersey, at 

 various seasons. Garden and Forest. III. 442, 463, 524, 

 534, 546. IV. 14, 188, 351. V. 220, 292, 363, 400, 435, 

 567. VI. 141, 314, 382, 443. VII. 102, 142, 212, 245, 302, 

 458, 482. VIII. 3, 103, 203, 262, 362, 452, 492. IX. 332, 

 412. X. 313, 4i'i, 471. 



These short sketches are marred by a certain amount of error in 

 identification and by a lack of clearness as to just which plants are wild 

 and which are growing in a wild garden, transplanted from elsewhere. 



Such plants, also, as Thuja occidentalis, Dalibarda repens, Coreopsis 

 grandiflora, Gerardia auricttlata, Sniilax tamnoides and Nyssa aquatica 

 are casually mentioned as familiar Pine Barren species, none of 

 which are known from the region. Certain other species are referred 

 to in a way that would lead one to think they occurred near Vineland, 

 while, in reality, they are found only on the coast or in West Jersey, 

 not in the Pines. 



1892. Harshberger, J. W. Flora of the Bameg-at Peninsula 

 Garden and Forest. 1892, 45. 



1893. Peters, John E. Notes on the Flora of Southern New- 

 Jersey. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club XX, 294, 295. 



