332 GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NEW JERSEY. 
ze) 
. i ahd 
. striatum (L.), Hedw. (0. leiocarpum, Br. & Sch.) 
Bergen: On red cedar, Palisades ; very rare. 
. psilocarpum, James. 
On shade trees, Central New Jersey. 
ANG@CTANGIUM, Hedw. 
. Peckii, Sull. 
Warren: Delaware Water Gap. 
. Lapponicum, Hedw. (Amphoridium Lapponicum, Schimp.) 
Tn crevices of rocks, northern part of the State. 
DRUMMONDIA, Hook. 
. clavellata, Hook. 
On the trunks and branches of trees (particularly red cedar), 
etc. Very common in the northern parts of the State. 
PTYCHOMITRIUM, Br. & Sch. 
. incurvum (Schwegr.), Sull. 
On old stone fences, rarely on rocks, northern parts of the 
State—Austin. Morris: Parsippany, and Passaic: Oakland— 
Mrs. Britton. 
GLYPHOMITRIUM, Brid. 
. saxicola (Web. & Mohr.), Mitt. (Campylostelium saxicola, Br. & Sch.) 
Bergen: On sandstone boulders near Closter ; rare. 
GRIMMIA, Ebrh. 
. conferta, Funck. 
Passaic : On rocks and on the ground, Passaic Falls*—Austin ; 
between Bloomingdale and Wanaque—Mrs. Britton. 
. apocarpa (L.), Hedw. 
Common on rocks in moist ravines, middle and northern 
counties. 
*Mr, Austin notes two yarieties of this species in his distributed sets, but does not 
give them names. One of them is probably var. obtusifolia, Schimp., which Braith- 
waite regards as a mere form. 
