380 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
DITRICHUM, Timm. (Leptotrichum, Hampe.) 
D. tortile (Schrad.), Hampe. (Trichostomum tortile, Schrad.) 
In dry soil; frequent.* 
D. pallidum (Schreb.), Hampe. (ZT. pallidum, Hedw.) 
On the ground. Very common throughout the State. 
PLEURIDIUM, Brid. 
P. subulatum (Schreb.), Lindb. (P. alternifolium, Brid.) 
Bergen: Old fields, and Camden: About Camden—Austin- 
Gloucester: Newfield—Rau. Passaic: Greenwood Lake, and 
Ocean: Toms River, and Middlesex: Morgans—Mrs. Britton. 
P. Raveneli, Aust. 
New Jersey—Austin in Lesq. & James’ Manual Mosses, N. 
A., p. 43. 
ARCHIDIUM, Brid. 
A. Ohioense, Schimp. 
Bergen: On flat rocks, Palisades. 
DICHODONTIUM, Schimp. 
D. pellucidum (L.),Schimp. (Dicranum pellucidum, Hedw.) 
Sussex: On rocks subject to inundation, in deep glens near 
West Vernon. 
CERATODON, Brid. 
C. purpureus (L.), Brid. 
On the ground in dry places. Very common throughout the 
State. 
Var. aristatus, Aust. 
In sandy pine barrens, 
SAILENIA, Lindb. 
S. ceesia (Vill.), Lindb. (Trichostomum glaucescens, Hedw.) 
Passaic: Crevices of rocks, Little Falls, 
*The Trichostomum lineare of the Preliminary Catalogue, as well as Trichodow 
nodulosus, Aust., probably belong in this genus, but their relations are uncertain. 
