94 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
R. occidentalis, L. 
Gloucester: Occasional—B. Heritage; and common in woods 
and thickets, middle and northern counties. 
R. villosus, Ait. High Blackberry. 
In fields and thickets. Common throughout ‘the State. A 
form with double flowers at Franklin, Essex Co.—Rusby. 
Var. humifusus, T. & G. 
Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. Hunterdon: Rosemont, fre- 
quent—Best. 
R. Canadensis, L. Low Blackberry. 
In rocky places and sandy fields. Common throughout the 
State. 
R. hispidus, L. Running Swamp Blackberry. : 
In shaded swamps. Common throughout the State. 
R, cuneifolius, Pursh. Sand Blackberry. Knee-high Blackberry. 
In sandy woods and fields. Middlesex: South Amboy— 
Leggett. Hunterdon: Near Rosemont—Best. Monmouth: 
—Common; and common in the southern counties. 
GEUM, L. 
Avens. 
G. album, Gmel. 
In woods and thickets. Camden: Winslow—F. L. Bassett; 
Kirkwood—H.A.Green. Burlington: Moorestown—J. Stokes ; 
Pemberton—Miss H. M. Willmarth; and common in the middle 
and northern counties. 
Var. flavum, Porter. 
Warren: Above Phillipsburg—Porter. 
G. Virginianum, L. 
Gloucester: Near Mickleton, not common—B. Heritage ; 
frequent or occasional in the middle and northern counties. 
G. strictum, Ait. 
In swampy ground. Gloucester: Mickleton, rare—B. Herit- 
age. Camden: Near Camden—Martindale. Ocean and Mon- 
mouth: Damp shaded places, not common—Knieskern; Free- 
hold—Willis in Torrey Herb. Mercer: Trenton—Stowell. 
