142 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
North Spring Lake—Lighthipe; Keyport—R. W. Brown; 
Sandy Hook—Britton ; and frequent in the middle and northern 
counties. 
GNAPHALIUM, L. 
Cud-weed. 
G. decurrens, Ives. 
Moist places in the northern counties; rare. Warren: Mar- 
ble Hill— Porter. ~ Morris: Chatham—Leggett. Essex :— 
Rusby. 
G. obtusifolium, L. (G. polycephalum, Michx.) Everlasting. 
In dry fields. Apparently common throughout the State. 
G. uliginosum, L. Low Cud-weed. 
In low grounds, especially along roadsides. Common or fre- 
quent throughout the State; less abundant southward. 
G. purpureum, L. 
In dry soil. Bergen: Closter—Austin; Rutherfurd Ceme- 
tery—Schuh. Morris: Chatham— Leggett. Union: Plain- 
field—T weedy ; and frequent on the Yellow Drift soils, middle 
and southern counties. 
INULA, L. 
Elecampane. 
I. Heventum, L. 
Roadsides and waste places. Escaped from cultivation. Fre- 
quent. Naturalized from Europe. 
POLYMNIA, L. 
Leaf- Ps 
P. Uvedalia, L.* le, 
Hudson: Foot of cliffs near Weehawken Ferry, 1864—T. F. 
Allen. See Bull. Torr. Club, i. 4. 
IVA, L. 
Marsh Elder. High-water Shrub. 
I. frutescens, L. 
Borders of ditches, etc., on the salt marshes ; common. 
* Reported first as P. Canadensis, L., in Gray’s Manual, p. 248. 
