BERRY: MESOZOIC FLORA OF ATLANTIC COASTAL PLAIN 421 
Eucalyptus angusta Velenovsky Pinus raritanensis Berry 
Eucalyptus Geinitzi Heer Podozamites Knowltoni Berry 
Eucalyptus Wardiana Berry . Proteoides lancifolius Heer 
Ficus atavina Heer Salix flexuosa Newb. 
Ficus crassipes Heer Salix Lesquereuxtui Berry 
Ficus Krausiana Heer Salix pseudo-Hayei Berry 
Ficus Stephensoni Berry Sapindus Morrisoni Heer 
Hamamelites (2) cordatus Lesq. Sequoia Reichenbachii (Gein.) Heer 
Hedera primordialis Saporta Widdringtonites subtilis Heer 
These 76 species include one thallophyte, two pteridophytes, 
one cycadophyte, thirteen Coniferales, five Monocotyledones, and 
fifty-four Dicotyledones. They are distributed among forty-nine 
genera in thirty-six families and twenty-six orders. The largest 
orders are the Pinales, Urticales, Ranales, Thymeleales, and 
Sapindales, each of which has six species. The largest single 
genus is Ficus with five species and the species of this genus are 
also the most abundant individually. The genera Salix, Magnolia, 
and Andromeda have four species each; Araucaria, Celastrophyl- 
lum, and Eucalyptus have three each; and the following genera 
are represented by two species each: Myrica, Quercus, Proteoides, 
Leguminosites, Laurus, Laurophyllum, Cinnamomum, and Dios- 
pyros. 
The single thallophyte represented by poorly preserved re- 
inains of a dichotomously branched thallus is of little botanical 
interest. The pteridophytes include a species referred to Onoclea 
and a Lycopodium, both represented by fruiting specimens. The 
cycadophytes, represented by a single species referred to Podo- 
zamites, are an insignificant element in the flora. TheConiferales are 
well represented. The Taxaceae are represented by Cephalotaxus- 
like fruits which are very common in the Black Creek beds of North 
Carolina and also occur in the upper Tuscaloosa beds of Alabama. 
The other member of this family is referred to the curious fernlike 
genus Protophyllocladus, a characteristic Upper Cretaceous type 
widely distributed in North America. The species is new but it 
has been recently detected by the writer in the Magothy formation 
of Maryland. The family Araucariaceae, so abundant in the 
Mesozoic, but antipodean in the existing flora, has three typical 
species in the South Carolina Cretaceous: one based on foliage, 
another on cone scales, and the third on seeds, possibly all repre- 
sentative of a single botanical species. The family Brachy- 
