148 REPORT OF NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM. 



Fl. — Early May to late May. Cones mature in late summer of 

 the second season and persist for several years. 



Middle District. — Farmingdale, Allaire, New Egypt (C), Arncy's Mt. (S), 

 Brown's Mills, Medford (S), Lindenwold, Mickleton (KB), Clcmenton (S), 

 Albion, Swedesboro, Centerton (S), Bridgeton (NB), Fairton (NB), Buck- 

 shutcm. 



pine Barrens. — Forked River, Barnegat, Manahawkin, Inskip, Winslow 

 Jnc, Hammonton (C), Quaker Bridge (S), Pleasant Mills, Mays Landing 

 (S). 



Cape May. — W. of Court House. 



Pinus rigida Mill. Pitch Pine. 



PI. II., Figs. I and 2 . PI. IV., Figs. 3 and 4. 



Pinus rigida Miller, Gard. Diet. Ed. 8, No. 10. 1768 [Virginia]. — Knieskern 

 29. — Britton 300. 



This is the common pine of the Pine Barrens. It occurs here 

 and there in the North and Middle districts and there is a con- 

 siderable grove on Absecon Beach, below Atlantic City. On the 

 other island beaches, however, it is absent or very rare. 



The Pitch Pine is the Pine of the Ncav Jersey Barrens, and 

 is largely restricted to them. Where a slight elevation of the 

 sandy plain makes it possible for one to look out over the sur- 

 rounding country, the pines extend in an unbroken sea of green 

 clear to the horizon, and where it is only possible to- see straight 

 ahead they line the white, sandy trail with a green barrier on 

 either side, stretching away until they seem to join together 

 and swallow it up. In somie places the pines reach a height of 

 sixty feet and grow comparatively close together with bare 

 trurLl<:s ; again they are shorter, and scattered here and there over 

 the white, shining sand, with branches all the way to the base; 

 and on the so-called plains they are dwarfed and stunted with 

 round boles half buried in the coarse sand and gravel, and 

 prostrate branches seldomi rising higher than ai man's knee. 



The pines lend a charm to this desolate country. In winter, 

 when the wind is sighing through their branches and patches 

 of snow here and there add to the whiteness of the sand, their 

 evergreen foliage seems to warmi the landscape, and their thick 

 wall of branches offer shelter from the storm; and in summer 

 the air of the pine land, rich with its resinous odor, seems dry. 



