Berry: MESOZOIC FLORA OF ATLANTIC COASTAL PLAIN 301 
Eucents Linné 
Eugenia (?) anceps sp. nov. 
‘ Coriaceous leaves of variable size and form, lanceolate or 
oblong lanceolate. Base and apex equally acuminate or apex 
somewhat more attenuated. Margins entire. Length 7.75-10 
cm. Maximum width, midway between the apex and the base, 
i 8mm. Petiole enlarged, short and stout, 3-4 mm. in length. 
idrib stout. Secondaries thin, immersed in the leaf substance. 
[Fics. 2~4.] 
This species is referred with much doubt to Eugenia. The 
material is abundant but poorly preserved and these leaves 
resemble a variety of forms referred to such genera as Salix, 
Laurophyllum, etc. 
Eugenia has a species in the Tuscaloosa formation of Alabama, 
another in the Dakota sandstone, and is not uncommon in the 
Eocene of the Mississippi embayment area. 
OccurRENCE: RIPLEY FORMATION, McNairy SAND 
MEMBER. Two and one half miles southwest of Selmer, McNairy 
County, Tennessee. 
ERICALES 
ERICACEAE 
ANDROMEDA Linné 
ANDROMEDA NOVAE-CAESAREAE Hollick 
Andromeda novae-caesareae Hollick; Newberry, Mon. U. S. Geol. 
Surv. 26: 121. pl. 42, f. 9-12, 28-31. 1896; Berry, U.S. Dept. 
Int. Geol. Surv. Professional Paper 84: 58, 120. pl. 14, f. 5, 6; 
pl. 24, f. 1. 1914: 
with stout petioles and mid- 
tion which is immersed in the 
thick lamina. Length 2.5-5.0 cm 
1.3 cm. Venation, where visible, 
camptodrome, relatively long and t 
variation in this respect, 
in a considerable number of specimens w 
