Berry : Mesozoic flora of the coastal plain 177 



the Cliffwood Brick Co. is larger than the Morgan leaf and shows 

 the long ascending camptodrome secondaries. 



Sapindales 



Ilex strangulata Lesq. Ann. Rep. U. S. Geol. and Geog. Surv. 



Terr. 1874: 359.//. 7./. 8. 1876. 



While this leaf is not so " strangulate " as the type, it is 

 exactly similar in all other respects. It has the same coriaceous 

 texture, thick petiole and midrib, and the same secondary venation, 

 particularly the marginal vein. From the pits of the Cliffwood 



j 



Rhamnales 



Paliurus populiferus sp. no v. 



Leaf orbicular, slightly emarginate at the apex and with a 

 decurrent base. Three-veined from the top of the petiole, which 

 is 0.94 cm. in length. Leaf 2.5 cm. long and 3.25 cm. wide. 



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j 



1905. 



Cissites crispcs Velen. Fl. Bohm. Kreidef. 4:12 (73). pi. 4 (27). 



f. 6. 1885 (1887). 

 Doubtful specimens of this species occur at the pits of the 



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Cut, Del. 



Malvales 



Grewiopsjs flabellata (Lesq.) Knowlt. Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. 



152 : 1 14. 1898. 



Poorly represented in the material from the Magothy forma- 

 tion at Grove Point, Md. 



minima 



11 Stercaliamucronata Lesq." ; Berry, Bull. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 3 : 90. 



Small 2- or 3-lobed, subcoriaceous leaves, ranging in length 

 from 4-6 cm. Lobes narrow, pointed, ascending at an angle of 

 somewhat less than 45 °, with narrow sinuses extending about half 

 way to the base. Lateral primaries branching from the midrib 

 above its base and secondary venation camptodrome, but not well 

 shown in most specimens. 



