61 
MAGNOLIA AURICULATA Newb. mss. (PL 179, £6; 7:) 
Amongst the commonest of the Amboy clay species are cer- 
tain very variable leaves which Newberry has described under the 
above name. In typical specimens the base of the leaf is seep et 
late, as it is in f. 7; in others the base is slightly decurrent, as in 
f.6. Close comparison with a large number of specimens seems 
to warrant the reference. 
Locality: Glen Cove. 
Macnoria VAN INGENI n. sp. (PI. 175, f. 6.) 
Leaf narrowly oblong, tapering equally to base and ayes 
margins almost parallel in the middle, entire; length about 43 = 
width about 13 in.; petioled; petiole about 1 in. long; midri 
narrow; secondaries fine, irregular, camptodrome near the margin 
and connected throughout by numerous fine loops and cross 
reticulations. 
Resembles JZ. glaucoides, but is much narrower. Named for 
Mr. Gilbert Van Ingen, the collector. 
Locality: Sea Cliff. 
LIRIODENDRON PRIMHVUM Newb. (PI. 179, f. 4.) 
Ltriodendron primevum Newb. Later Extinct Floras, Ann. 
Lyc. Nat. Hist. N. Y. 9: 12 (1868); and Illust. Cret. & Tert. Pl. 
pl. 6, f. 7, ’ 
This imperfect specimen apparently represents one of the 
many forms which this species assumes, under which it has re- 
ceived the names of Leguminosites Marcouanus Heer, Phyllites 
cbcordatus Heer, Liriodendron Meckii Heer, etc., from the West 
and from Greenland.* It has also been found by me on Staten 
Island} and in the Amboy clays (?). 
Locality: Glen Cove. 
LirRIODENDRON sIMPLEX Newb. (PI. 179, f. 9.) 
Liriodendron simplex Newb. Bull. Torr. Club, 14: 6, p/. 62,7. 2, a 
34 (1887). 
This is apparently the most abundant of all our cretaceous 
Species in America. It is often difficult to separate from the prev- : 
*See L. Meekii and its varieties in Fl. Foss, Arct. 6: 87-90, leseael oles DS 
PITS 5, fk 5 : A ee 
ASS 235 f. * 25,f. 54.3 45, f. 132, b. PS on 
tTrans. N. y, hcak Sci. 1x: pl. 2, f. 8? (1892), and 12: 35» At iS si 
