150 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
8. aureus, L. Golden Ragwort. 
Low grounds. Camden: Cedar Lake—Wm. F. Bassett; 
Atco, rare—H. A. Green. Burlington: Birmingham—Light- 
hipe. Gloucester: Mickleton, not.common—B. Heritage; and 
common in the northern and middle counties. 
Var. Balsamites (Muhl.), T. & G. 
In rocky places. Middle and northern counties ; frequent. 
Var. obovatus (Mubl.), T. & G. 
Camden: River swamp—Parker. Morris: Shongum Lake 
-—Schuh. 
8. tomentosus, Michx. Wooly Ragwort. 
_. Atlantic: Landisville—C. A. Gross, 1881. Cape May: 
Ocean View Station, at the edge of the marsh—Commons, 1882 ; 
. above the steamboat landing—I. Burk. 
... GAGALIA, L. 
Indian Plantain. 
14 , 
Ho RRS Se goad Oe 
C. suaveolens, L. 
Mercer: Princeton, 1838—B. Jeger in Torrey Herb. Mon- 
4 mouth: “ Rich fence-rows, Freehold ”’— Willis. 
C. reniformis, Muhl. 
‘Camden: Banks of the Delaware, near the city—Parker. 
C. atriplicifolia, L. 
: .Camden:. Damp meadow and hillside near Haddonfield— 
Parker. Burlington: Palmyra—J. Stokes. Monmouth: Waln- 
ford— Britton. Mercer: Trenton—P. H. Van Cleve. Hun- 
terdon: Stockton, Raven Rock and Bull’s Island—Best. 
Warren: Along the Delaware below Phillipsburg—Porter. 
Apparently confined to the Delaware River valley. 
ARCTIUM, L. 
Burdock. 
A. Lappa, L. (Lappa officinalis, All.) 
Waste places; common. Naturalized from Europe. 
