198 BERRY: MESOZOIC FLORA OF THE COASTAL PLAIN 
PHASEOLITES FORMUS Lesq. Fl. Dakota Group 147. 
Dre Meebo bye A ASQ2 
This common Dakota Group species is present in considerable 
abundance in the Tuscaloosa formation of Alabama, so that it is 
not surprising to find it in North Carolina, although the material 
from the latter state is rather incomplete. 
OccuRRENCE: Court House Bluff, Cape Fear River. 
SAPINDALES 
CELASTROPHYLLUM UNDULATUM Newb. Fl. Amboy 
Clays 102. pl. 38. f. 1-3. 1896 
This large species is represented in the Black Creek formation 
by even larger leaves than those found in the New Jersey Raritan. 
It is reported also by Smith from the Tuscaloosa formation of 
Alabama. 
OccuRRENCE: Court House “Bluff, Cape Fear River. 
THY MELEALES 
LauropHyLtuM ELEGANS Hollick, Mon. U. S. Geol. 
Surv. 50: 81. pl. 27. f. 1-5. 1907 
Imperfect leaves of what appears to be this species, which was 
described in 1907 from the Cretaceous deposits of Long Island 
and Staten Island, occur in the Black Creek formation. It has 
also been recorded recently from the Magothy formation of 
Maryland. 
OccuRRENCE: Court House Bluff, Cape Fear River. 
Malapoenna horrellensis sp. nov. 
Leaves ovate-lanceolate, about 8 cm. long by 2.5 cm. in 
greatest width, broadest at ‘the evenly rounded or slightly acute 
base, narrowing gradually upward, the apex narrow and extended 
but obtusely pointed. Leaf substance thin but persistent, evi- 
dently coriaceous in life, since these leaves occur abundantly at a 
locality where all the vegetable remains except the resistant Arav- 
caria, Cunninghamites, and Pistia were evidently thoroughly macer- 
ated before entombment. Secondaries 4-6 pairs, subopposite, 
curved upward, camptodrome, branching from the midrib at an 
acute angle, the lowest branching from the top of the petiole and 
extending upward half way to the apex or farther, giving the leat 
