[Dawson ] VANCOUVER TERTIARY PLANTS 149 
Atanékerdluk, in Greenland, and is recognized by Lesquereux at Green 
River, Spring Canon, and Carbon, in Lower Tertiary beds. 
Found by Lesquereux at Green River, Spring Canon, and Carbon. 
/ÆSCULOPHYLLUM HASTINGSENSE, S. n, 
(Fig. 16.) 
This is a fragment of the lower part of a large leaf from Burrard’s 
Inlet. It is much crumpled and the margin is not well preserved, but it 
shows distinctly a septinate division into oblong leaflets, coming to a 
point below and articulated to the top of a common petiole. Traces of 
venation also show a resemblance to the modern Horse-chesnut, though 
the leaflets are narrower and the veins more curved. The genus Æseulus 
is represented in the Upper Laramie, east of the mountains, by a fruit 
(Æsculus antiqua) described by me in the Transactions of this Society 
for 1886. 
Ficus SHASTENSIS ? Lesq. 
he ES 
Gigs iis) 
Lesquereux, Bulletin U. S. National Museum, 1888. 
This leaf, from Burrard’s Inlet, resembles the above-named species in 
form and surface character, but the venation is not preserved. Les- 
quereux’s specimens are from Shasta, California. 
Ficus OccIDENTALIS ? Lesq. 
Lesquereux, U. S. Survey, vol. vii., p. 200. 
Fragments of a broad-leaved Ficus occur in the Hastings collections, 
which are very near to this species. Similar fragments, but of smaller 
size and apparently narrower, appear in the collections from Stanley 
Park. They evidently represent a fine species of the genus near to, if 
not identical with, that named above. 
Found by Lesquereux at Golden, Colorado. 
PLANERA CRENATA, Newberry. 
Newberry, unpublished plates communicated to me by Prof. Knowlton, of the U.S. 
National Museum. 
This species is indicated by a leaf of which half is preserved on a 
surface of the Hastings core. Newberry’s specimens are from Tongue 
River, Wyoming. I do not know the precise horizon. 
This plant continued in British Columbia up to the Oligocene period, 
since it is found in collections recently made by Dr. G. M. Dawson at 
