62 
ious one. It is common in the Amboy clays, on Staten Island,* 
Long Island,+ Martha’s Vineyard,t Greenland and in the West. 
As in the previously described species it may also be identified in 
some of the forms of L. Meekii Heer, and Sapotacites retusus Heer, 
from Greenland,§ and as Safotacites Flaydeni Heer and Phyllites 
obcordatus Heer, from the West.|| 
Locality: Glen Cove. 
LIRIODENDRON OBLONGIFOLIUM Newb. mss. (Pl. 179, f. 3.) 
This is apparently a fragment of the species described by 4 
Newberry under the above name from: the Amboy clays. 
Locality: Glen Cove. 
PLANT REMAINS OF UNCERTAIN AFFINITIES. 
On Plate 180 may be seen a number of fragmentary remains, 
whose exact botanical affinities it would be very difficult to state. 
f. 1. Apparently a winged seed or samara. It is too symmetri- - 
cal for Pinus, but may represent one wing or lobe of the organism 
described by Newberry under the name Tricalycites papyraceus, : 
from the Amboy clays, a specimen of which is figured on this _ 
plate and described further on. Or, if it were not for the well- 
defined nucleus at the base, I should be inclined, perhaps, to con 
sider our specimen as a leaf of some species of Podozamites ot 
Pterophyllum, such for example as Pterophyllum (?) Haydeni Lesq. 
Cret. Fl. 50, pl. 1, f. 6, 66. : 
Locality: Glen Cove. 
f. 
many of which are found in the Amboy clays. 
Locality: Glen Cove. 
i 2, 3 
* Trans. N. Y. Acad. Sci. rz: 98, pl. 2, f. 2-7, 9 (1892). 
+ Trans. N. Y. Acad. Sci. ra: 235) Pl. 5, f. 1-5; and 7, f 2, 3 (1893) 
¢ Am, Journ, Sci, (IIT.) 39: 98, pz. 2, J: 6, 7 (1890). 
§ See previous reference and Fl. Foss. Arct. 7: 32, pl. 61, f. 10; 38, pl. 63, f & 
| Ullust Cret, and Tert. Pl. p. 5, f 7-3, oes : oy 
