276 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
den: Near Camden and Winslow—Parker. Gloucester: Below 
Woodbury—Canby. Salem: Pennsgrove—Commons. 
C. umbellata, Schk. 
Monmouth and Ocean: Dry, sandy fields, common—Knies- 
kern; Toms River—Britton. Warren: Delaware Water Gap 
—Garber. Hunterdon: Frequent—Best. 
C. pubescens, Muhl. 
Hunterdon :- Near Rosemont, 1885—Best. 
C. Willdenovii, Schk. 
In woods. Bergen: Closter—Austin. Hunterdon: Below 
Holland Station and above Milford—Porter ; Rosemont—Best. 
Gloucester: Near Woodbury—C. E. Smith. 
C. polytriehoides, Muhl. 
Gloucester: Mickleton, not common—B. Heritage. Fre- 
quent in the middle and northern counties. 
C. stipata, Muhl. 
In swamps and low meadows. Common throughout the State.. 
C. teretiusctila, Good. 
In swamps. Bergen: Common at Closter—Austin. Morris: 
Budd’s Lake—Porter. Sussex: Andover, and Warren :—. 
Garber. 
C. vulpinoidea, Michx. 
In swamps and low meadows. Common throughout the State.* 
C. tenella, Schk. 
In bogs in the northern counties. Hudson: New Durham— 
Austin. Bergen: Tenafly—Leggett. Morris: Budd’s Lake 
—Porter. : 
C. rosea, Schk. 
In moist woods. Morris: Berkshire Valley, and Sussex : 
Sparta—Britton. 2 
Var. radiata, Dewey. 
In woods. Frequent or common throughout the State. Much 
more abundant than the type. 
*C. disticha, Huds., ascribed to Sussex Co. in the Willis Catalogue, on the authority 
of Garber, and admitted into the Preliminary Catalogue, must be omitted as uncertain. 
