PLANTS OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY. 783 



been comparatively little published concerning the plant life 

 of the region. The following bibliography, while it does not 

 profess to be complete, contains most of the publications which 

 deal exclusively or mainly with the plants of this region. Various 

 general works and papers, many of which are cited in synonymy 

 or foot notes on the preceding pages, and a few of which are 

 included here, also contain matter relative to the flora of South- 

 ern New Jersey. 



1753-61. Kalm, Peter.* En Risa til Norra America. Stock- 

 holm, III Vols., 484 pps. 



Kalm spent some time at Philadelphia and at the Swedish settlements 

 on the New Jersey side of the Delaware some miles below. Among the 

 plants that he submitted to Linnaeus on his return to Sweden were a 

 number from this vicinity. 



1813. Muhlenberg. Henry, D.D.f Catalogus Plantarum 

 Americse Septentrionalis hue usque Cognitarum Indigena- 

 run et Cicurum; or a Catalogue of the Hitherto Known 

 Native and Naturalized Plants of North America, arranged 

 according to the Sexual System of Linnaeus, pp. I-IV + i 

 — ^112. Lancaster, Pa., 1813. 



Contains southern New Jersey species, but in the absence of descrip- 

 tions the names have no application. 



1817. MuHEENBERG, Henry, D.D. Descriptio Uberior Gram- 

 inum et Plantarum Calamiarum Americae Septentrionalis 

 Indigenarum et Cicurum. pp. i-ii + 1-295. Philadelphia, 

 1817. 



A posthumous work comprising the grasses and sedges of a pro- 

 posed flora of North America, of which the Catalogue 1813 was a pre- 

 liminary outline. 



1814. PuRSH, Frederick.! Flora Americae Septentrionalis; or 

 a Systematic Arrangement and Description of the Plants of 

 North America. London, 2 Vols., pp. I-XXXVI + 1-75 1, 

 24 plates. 



* Cf. Darlington, Memorials of Bartram and Marshall, p. 367, 1849, for 

 biographical sketch. 



t Cf. Pop. Sci. Mo. XLV 689. 



t Cf. Bot. Gazette VII, 141 for biography. 



