30 



* Quercus phellos, L. Willow Oak. Peach Oak. 



"Mercer, Monmouth: Near Keyport; near Long Branch. 

 Middlesex : South River, New Brunswick and common south- 

 ward. 7 ' (Britton.) 



"Willow Oak is plentiful in Cape May and Atlantic coun- 

 ties." (Gcol. Rpt, '94, Gifford, 260.) 



"Quercus phellos is more or less abundant in the southern 

 part of the State in both the coniferous and tension zones. 

 Further north, especially abundant in the clay belt of the 

 latter zone, where it occurs close to the edge of the Triassic 

 border, but has not been recorded beyond." (Geol. Ept., '99, 

 Hollick, 189.) 



Quercus Budkini, Britt, (Q. Phellos, L., X. Q. nigra, L.) ? 

 Rudkins Oak. 



"Monmouth : Near Middleton ; in low woods, and near 

 Keyport. Salem: Low woods near the Delaware, a single 

 tree. Burlington: Birmingham." (Britton.) 



Quercus heterophylla, Michx. Bartram Oak. 



"Cumberland : In low woods near Fairton. Salem : Four 

 miles from Pennsgrove, a form with deeply-lobed leaves. 

 Gloucester: Near Woodbury; near Mickleton. Camden: 

 Haddonfield. Burlington : Mount Holly. Ocean : New 

 E gyP t? ' (Britton.) 



"This is perhaps a hybrid between Quercus Phellos and 

 Quercus velutina. It was first known in the eighteenth 

 century from an individual growing in a field belonging to 

 John Bartram on the Schuylkill river, Philadelphia. What 

 appears to be the same form has since been discovered in a 

 number of stations from New Jersey to Texas, and it is 

 possible that Quercus heterophylla may, as many botanist? 

 have believed, best be considered a species." (Sargent's 

 "Manual of the Trees of North America," 249.) 



Quercus brevifolia, Sarg. Blue Jack. 



"Sussex: Waterloo, Sussex Mills, Andover, Walpack 

 Center and Swartswood. Morris: Near Budd's lake. Es- 

 sex: Orange. Hunterdon: Rare, and common in the middle 

 and southern counties on the sandy soils of the Yellow Drift." 

 (Britton.) 



