104. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
S. TeLerHium, L. Live-for-ever. 
Commonly escaped from cultivation into meadows and even 
into woods.* Naturalized from Europe. 
PENTHORUM, L. 
. Ditch Stone-crop. 
P. sedoides, L. 
In wet places. Ocean: Near New Egypt, rare—Knies- 
kern. Camden: Frequent—Martindale. Gloucester: Repaupo 
Meadows—B. Heritage; and common in swamps and ditches, 
middle and northern counties. 
DROSERACE. 
DROSERA, L. 
Sundew. 
D. rotundifolia, L. 
In bogs. Locally common or frequent throughout the State. 
D. intermedia, Drev. & Hayne, var. Americana, DC. (D. longifolia, 
Michx., not L.) 
Passaic: Greenwood Lake—Britton. Mercer: Lawrence 
Statien—Peters.. Middlesex: South Amboy—Britton. Mer- 
cer: Near Trenton—E. Volk. Burlington: Banks of the Dela- 
ware, at Florence Heights—Abbott. Camden: Rare—C. E. 
Smith; and common in bogs in the pine barrens. 
D. filiformis, Raf. 
Camden: Very scarce—Martindale; and frequent in sandy 
pine-barren swamps throughout the southeastern parts of the 
State. 
HAMAMELIDE. 
HAMAMELIS, L. 
ree Witch-hazel. 
H. Virginica, L. 
Camden: Sparingly about Camden—Martindale. Gloucester: 
Bank of Raccoon Creek—B. Heritage. Monmouth and Ocean : 
* The plant rarely flowers in New Jersey, but has become widely spread, probably 
through its great tenacity of life, its joints taking root wherever scattered by the 
plough or in other manner, as was first suggested to me by Professor Porter. 
