120 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
- CORNACEZ. 
CORNUS, L. 
Dogwood. Cornel. 
C. Canadensis, L. Dwarf Cornel. 
In cold, wet woods; rare. Hudson: New Durham Swamp 
—Torrey Catalogue, 1819, and Austin, 1861. Mercer: A 
single specimen near Trenton, 1879—Miss Isabel Mulford. 
Sussex: Abundant in a swamp on west side of High Point— 
— Britton. 
C. florida, L. Dogwood. 
In open woods. Common throughout the State. Not very 
abundant in the pine barrens. 
C. circinata, L’Hér. Round-leaved Cornel. 
In rocky woods. Union: Plainfield—Tweedy. Hunterdon: 
Byram—Best. Bergen: Closter—Austin; near Mahwah— 
Schuh ; and frequent in the northwestern parts of the State. 
C. sericea, L. Kinnikinnik. 
Along streams. Camden: Kirkwood and Clementon—H. 
A. Green; abundant about Camden—Martindale. Burlington : 
Vincentown—Britton. Gloucester: Mullica Hill—Britton ; 
not common—B. Heritage; and common in the middle and 
northern counties. 
C. stolonifera, Michx. Red-osier Cornel. 
In swamps, northern counties. Bergen: Closter—Austin. 
Passaic: Greenwood Lake—Britton. Sussex: Newton and on 
the Wallkill Marshes east of Quarryville—Britton. Warren: 
In a swamp on Jenny Jump Mountain near Green’s Pond— 
Merrill. Hunterdon: Not rare in the northern parts of the 
county—Best.* 
C. candidissima, Marsh. (C. paniculata, L’Hér.) 
In dry soil. Burlington: Near Pemberton—Lighthipe. 
Camden: Near the mouth of Rancocas Creek—Martindale ; 
and frequent or common in the middle and northern counties. 
* This species is recorded in Dr. Knieskern’s Catalogue of the plants of Ocean and 
Monmouth counties as common along wet banks of streams. C. sericea is probably 
intended. : 
