DESCRirTION OF SPECIES— CAEPITES. 305 



C a ■' p ■ t c s t; t a li c n s i fi , sp. uov. 



Plate LX, Fi^r 22. 



Fruit feinall, Ixuadly obovutc, cordate or cmargiuate at one cud, lomidod 

 to a sliort ])()iiit al (lie other, suioolli, l)eariiig remains of a (liiii e[)ieari). It 

 is one eentiineter long, and seven niilliiueters liroad toward (Ik^ point. 



Habitat. — Evanston, Wyoming. 



C :i I' p i t c s V 1' I' r u c o s u K , sp. uov 



Plate LX, Fig. y:;. 



Fruit nearly round, ont^ ceulimefer across, emarginate in the lower ])art 

 at its point of attachment to a short !)roken pedicel; surface Hat, covered with 

 small obtuse warts, '^l^his seed is like the flattened drupe of a Magnolia. In 

 the living M. grandijlora, the base of the seed is cut or emarginate as in this 

 one, and generally has its short pedicel attached to it. This seed is sur- 

 rounded by a flat margin, which may be the borders of a flattened pericarp. 



Habitat. — Black Buttes, Wyoming, Saurian bed; represented by three 

 specimens. 



€ a r p i t c s lu i n ii t ii I ii s, sp. uov. 

 Plate LX, Fig. C5. 



Seeds very small, three millimeters long, only half as l)road, inflated and 

 rounded at one end, gradually narrowed to a short acumen, smooth. It 

 reseraljles by its size and form C. Icevltisculus, Heer (Fl. Sjiitz., pi. xv, tig. 47). 

 It is mixed with fragments of stems and Ijianches which appear to belong 

 to some Conifers, but crushed and unidcntiflable. 



Habitat. — South Table Mountain, near Golden, Colorado. 



C a r p j t e s V i b ti r ii i , sp. uov. 



Plate LX, Figs. iili. i2G a. 



Fruit small, ovoid, obtuse, short-pediceled, six to seven millimeters in 

 diameter, covered with a thin, flattened pericarp. It is apparently a seed of 

 Viburnum, like some of those of fig. 2 of the same plate. It is, however, 

 from a diflerent locality. 



Habitat. — Black Buttes, Wyoming, where leaves of Vihuri uni species 

 are very abundant. 

 20 T F 



