44 " Art. 8.— A. Kryshtofovich : 



1902. HoLLiCK, Geo!, and Botaii. Notes : Cape Cod and Chappaquidick 

 Island, p. 402, pi. XLT, f. 6. 



1903. HoLLiCK, Fifty fifth annual report of New York State Museum, for 

 1901. p. 249. 



Dammara CUffordiensis, Berry, The Flora of the Matawan Forma- 

 tion, p. 61, pi. XLVIII, f. 8-11. 



1904. Dammara microlepis, Hollick, Additions to the Paleobotany of the 

 Cretaceous Formation of Long Island, No. 2, p. 410, pi. LXXI, fig. 

 9, 10. 



1904. Dammara CUffordiensis, B; rey, Additions to the Flora of the Matawan 



Formation, p. 69, pi. I, f. 11. 

 1906. Dammara borealis, Hollick, Cretaceous Flora of Southern New York, 



p. 37, pi. II, fig. 2-11, 12-26, 27 a. 



1910. Berry, Contributions to the Mesoz jic Fl. of the Atlanti.j Coastal Plain, 

 V. N. Carolina, p. 185. 



1911. Berry, The Flora of the Raritan Formation, p. 80. 



Locality : Sea-shore at Mgaeh and to the north of it, 

 also near Arkovo. 



Claviculoid scales of this plant, measuring about 1 cm. in 

 length, and very typical of the Middle Cretaceous of Europe, 

 Greenland and America, were collected in many places on the 

 Western Coast. Their form and size well coincide with those of 

 the species fi'om the above mentioned countries. Some authors 

 were of opinion, that the plant with those scales should be put into 

 Eucalyptus. Others, as Hollick and Berry, have recently insisted, 

 that it belongs to Coniferas, probably Avaucariaccce, though perhaps 

 not quite identical with the living genus Dammara. This species 

 was found first by Hitchcock in the Dakota bed and afterwards 

 in the Atane, together with D. microlepU. The latter has been 

 recorded with D. macrosperma, also from Patoot of Greenland ; 

 being recognized by Heer in Atane, under the name of EucalyptuSy 

 together with Pr. suhintegrifolius ; and by Krasser, Velenovsky 



