BULLETIN 
TORREY BOTANICAL CLUB. | 
Additions to the Palaobotany of the Cretaceous Formation 
on Long Island. 
[PLATES 174-180. ] 
By ARTHUR HOLLICK. 
-In previous contributions* may be found descriptions and 
figures of ten species of cretaceous leaves from the north shore of 
Long Island. Since these contributions were prepared, consider- 
able new material has been added from several sources, besides 
which, all the material previously collected but not described has 
been Subjected to careful examination. The results obtained it is 
the object of this paper to present. 
For part of the new material I am indebted to the courtesy of 
the Long Island Historical Society, in whose collection are sev- 
eral valuable specimens, which I was allowed every possible 
facility to study. Another series of specimens was collected by 
Mr. Gilbert Van Ingen, curator in the geological department of 
Columbia College, and the remainder was personally collected in 
fonnection with the summer school of geology of Columbia © 
College: All the specimens, with the exception of those belong-— 
*i. “ Preliminary Contribution to Our Knowledge of the Cretaceous Formation ~—- 
vin Island and Eastward.” Trans. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 12: 222-237, p2. 5-7 __ < - 
ne : : * 7 “ ah Saat a 
ii. “A New Fossil Palm from the Cretaceous Formation at Glen Cove, Long — 
Bull. Torr. Bot. Club, 20: 168, 169, p/. 749 (1893). eee 
‘aay it “Some Further Notes upon Serenopsis Kempii.” Bull. Torr. Bot. 
) 334, 335, 2/. 166 (1893). See ee 
