192 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 



U. fibrosa, Walt. (U. striata, Le Conte.) 



In swamps on the Yellow Drift. Gloucester: Malaga and 

 Franklinville Parker. Atlantic: Hammonton J. Stokes; 

 Mays Landing Peters; Egg Harbor City Redfield. Cam- 

 den : Martindale. Salem : Elmer Parker. Burlington : 

 Quaker Bridge Leggett; Brown's Mills J. Stokes; Atsion 

 meadows H. A. Green. Ocean : Manchester Chick ering. 

 Monmouth : Upper Squankum Willis. 



U. gibba, L. 



In bogs. Bergen : Closter Austin ; along the Passaic near 

 Woodside Leggett. Monmouth: Freehold O. E. Pearce ; 

 Bay Head Lighthipe. 



U. purpurea, Walt. 



In ponds in the pine barrens ; frequent. 

 U. cornuta, Michx. 



Sandy borders of swamps in the southern counties*. Burling- 

 ton : New Lisbon Lighthipe ; and common in the pine barrens* 



U. subulata, L. 



In wet sand. Gloucester: Near Woodbury C. E. Smith. 

 Burlington : Between New Lisbon and Pemberton Lighthipe ; 

 and frequent in the pine barrens. 



U. cleistogama (Gray), Britt. (U. subulata, var. cleistogama, Gray.) 



Burlington : Wet ground along Atsion River below Atsion, 

 1881 Prof. J. A. Allen. Ocean: Forked River, 1889- 

 Britton. Reported also from the pine barrens in Gray's Manual , 

 p. 320, collected by J. A. Paine, Jr. 



BIGNONIACE^E. 



CATALPA, Juss. 

 Indian Bean. Catalpa. 

 C. bignonioides, Walt. 



Mercer : Banks of Crosswicks Creek, " where it must be 

 native, as it figures in a deed for land bearing date of 1684, as 

 Indian Bean Tree, which is certainly before these trees were 

 brought from the South for shade and ornamental purposes " 

 C. C. Abbott. Burlington : Along Rancocas Creek, Pemberton 



