46 ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
QUERCUS HOLMESII, Lesq. 
Lesquereux, Flora of the Dakota Group, 58. 
Cretaceous and Tertiary Floras, 38 (1883), Pl. IV., 8. 
Dawson, Trans. R. Soc. Can., XI., iv., 59 (1893). 
Upper Cretaceous of Port McNeil, Vancouver Island, and Dakota Group of 
San Juan River, Colorado. 
One nearly perfect leaf and several fragments to be referred 
without doubt, to this species which was reported by Sir William 
Dawson from the same locality in 1893. 
LAUROPHYLLUM INSIGNE, Dn. 
Dawson, Trans. R. Soc. Can. XW iv., 61 Pl. VIL, 24 & 25. 
Upper Cretaceous of Port McNeil, Vancouver Island. 
This species is represented by several fragments of leaves with 
characteristic venation. 
CINNAMOMUM SEZANNENSE, Watlet. 
Lesquereux, Flora of the Dakota Group, 107, Pl. XII., 6 & 7. 
Dawson, Trans. R. Soc. Can., XI., iv., 64, PI. XIII., 58. 
Cretaceous of Glen Cove and Sea Cliff, Long Island, and Port McNeil, 
Vancouver Island. 
This species is represented in the present collection by one-half 
a leaf only, but it had been recognized by Sir William Dawson in 
collections from the same locality in 1893. 
PLANTS FROM THE RED DEER RIVER. 
In 1889 Mr. Weston, of the Geological Survey, made a collection 
of plants from the mouth of the Blind Man River, a tributary of the 
Red Deer River, N.W.T. These plants were supplementary to the 
collections from the same locality previously reported upon by Sir 
William Dawson, and published in the Report of the Geological 
Survey for 1886, and the Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 
for 1887. The formation from which these plants were derived, has 
been assigned to the Laramie. According to a note kindly supplied 
by Dr. H. M. Ami, of the Geological Survey, the Laramie formation 
south of the 50th parallel has been divided by Dr. G. M. Dawson into 
three series, viz.: (1) the Porcupine Hill, (2) the Willow Creek, and 
(3) the St. Mary River series. In northern Alberta, between 51 deg. 
