242 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
MUSCARI, Mill. 
: Grape Hyacinth. 
M. Borryorpes (L.), Mill. 
Escaped from cultivation. Union: Plainfield —Tweedy. 
Mercer: Trenton—Apgar. Adventive from Europe. 
ORNITHOGALUM, L. 
Star-of-Bethlehem. 
O. UMBELLATUM, L. 
Escaped from gardens into fields and meadows; frequent. 
Naturalized from Europe. ° 
LILIUM, L. 
Lily. 
L. Philadelphicum, L. Wild Red Lily. 
In dry soil. Ocean and Monmouth: “Open copses, not rare” 
—Konieskern; Keyport, very rare—R. W. Brown. Hudson: 
Bergen Point—Leggett. Atlantic: Mays Landing, a single 
specimen—Peters; and frequent in the northern counties. 
L. Canadense, L. Wild Yellow Lily. 
In low meadows. Burlington: Pemberton Junction—Light- 
hipe. Ocean and Monmouth: Not common—Knieskern. Mer- 
cer: Trenton—E. Volk; and frequent in the middle and north- 
. ern counties. 
Forma rubrum, Britt. 
Passaic: In a meadow east of West Milford—Britton, and 
in Bergen Co.—G. C. Woolson. 
L. superbum, L. Turk’s Cap Lily. 
In low meadows. Bergen: Common on the Hackensack 
meadows, and in swamps, middle and southern counties. 
ERYTHRONIUM, L. 
Dog’s Tooth Violet. 
BH. Americanum, Ker. Yellow Adder’s Tongue. 
In low grounds. Camden: Banks of Little Timber Creek— 
Martindale; Haddonfield—Bassett. Gloucester: Frequent about 
