116 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
Trenton, and northward for five miles along the river—Apgar. 
Camden: Banks of the Delaware—Parker. Also, “South 
Jersey, rare”’—Austin. 
FQiINICULUM, Adans. 
Fennel. 
F. VULGARE, Geertn. 
Roadsides and waste places. Cape May: Commons. Atlan- 
tic: Egg Harbor—Martindale. Camden: In ballast—Parker. 
Hudson: Guttenberg—Rudkin; in ballast at Communipaw— 
A. Brown. Hunterdon: Rosemont, escaped from gardens— 
Best. Adventive from Europe. 
CRANTZIA, Nutt. 
Crantzia. 
C. lineata (Michx.), Nutt. 
Atlantic: “Abundant in a salt marsh near Egg Harbor ”— 
Nuttall in Herb. Phil. Not recently collected. 
DISCOPLEURA, DC. 
Mock Bishop-weed. 
D. major (Walt.), B.S. P. (D. capillacea, DC.) 
Common along the coast, in salt or brackish marshes. Occa- 
sionally in fresh-water swamps. 
AITHUSA, L. 
Fool’s Parsley. 
/E. Cynapium, L. 
In waste places. Bergen: Near Pleasant Valley and Fort 
Lee—Leggett. Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. Camden: Had- 
donfield, and in ballast at Camden—Parker. Adventive from 
Europe. 
THASPIUM, L. 
3 Meadow Parsnip. 
T. aureum (L.), Nutt. 
In low meadows. Monmouth and Ocean: Rare—Knieskern. 
Gloucester: Banks of the Delaware—Parker. Camden: Quite 
frequent—Martindale. Mercer: Trenton—Apgar; and frequent 
in the middle and northern counties. 
