80 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
LEGUMINOSZ. 
BAPTISIA, Vent. 
False Indigo. 
B. tinctoria (L.), R. Br. Wild Indigo. 
Dry, sandy soil. Common throughout the State; most abund- 
ant in the southern counties. 
B. tevcopH Za, Nutt. 
Gloucester: Spontaneous in a yard at Newfield, and persistent 
for several years—J. B. Ellis. Fugitive from the West. 
CROTALARIA, L. 
Rattle-box, 
C. sagittalis, L. 
Warren: Marble Hill, above Phillipsburg—Porter. Hun- 
terdon: A few patches near Pittstown—Henry Race; common 
about Rosemont and Stockton—Best. Passaic: Near Wanaque 
—Britton; and common in sandy fields, middle and southern 
counties. 
LUPINUS, L. 
Lupine, 
L. perennis, L. 
In sandy fields, rarely in rocky places. Sussex: High Point, 
Hamburg, and abundant at Sparta—Britton; and common or 
frequent in sandy fields, middle and southern counties. 
Forma rosea, Britt. 
Atlantic: Mays Landing—Peters. 
MEDICAGO, L. 
Medick. 
M. sativa, L. Lucerne Clover. 
In waste places and ballast. Camden: Stockton township— 
Martindale; in ballast—Parker. Hunterdon: Rosemont, rare 
—Best. Gloucester: Mickleton—B. Heritage. Occasionally 
cultivated for fodder. With yellow flowers at Everittstown, 
Hunterdon Co., Schuh, 1886. Fugitive from Europe. 
