76 BERRY: FLORA OF THE MATAWAN FORMATION 
MAGNOLIA SPECIOSA Heer. (PLATE 3, FIGURE IO.) 
Sai a — Heer, Neue Denksch. Schw. ania _ 20; pL Of. ZT i * 
sf. 40, f 2: 38bg.. Lesq. Cret. & Ter « ¥2. 2574. 
Pokies 202. #1. 60. f. 3, g. 1892. Hollick, ane N. Y¥. Acad. on igs 
234. pl. 7.f. g. 1893. Bull. Torrey Club : Go, pl. 778. f. 5. 1894 
Bull. Geol. Soc. Am. 7: 13. 1895. Knowlion in Hill, Ann. Rep. U. S. 
Geol. Surv. 212: 318. Igor. 
Described originally from the Cenomanian of Moravia (Mole- 
tein), it has been identified at various localities in the Dakota 
Group, Tuscaloosa, and Island Raritan. It has not as yet been 
detected in the Cenomanian of Greenland, although some of Heer’s 
figures of Magnolia Capellinii are suggestively similar ; the latter 
species is, as a rule a wider, more robust leaf. 
Magnolia speciosa seems related to a group of leaves exempli- 
fied by Magnolia pseudoacuminata Lesq., of the Dakota ; JZ. tenut- 
nervis Lesq., as identified by Knowlton from the Montana forma- 
tion ; MZ. amplifolia Heer, from Moletein and the Dakota, and 
M. Californica Lesq., from the Tertiary. 
MAGNoLia CapPELLinit Heer. (PLATE 3, FIGURE 3.) 
Magnolia Capellinit Heer, Phyll. Crét. Nebr. 21. f/. 7. f. 5, 6. 1866. FI. Foss. 
Arct. 3: 115. p/. 33, f. r-g. 18743 67: go. age 24. eee as. J. Pte 
pl. f. 1. 1882. Lesq. Rept. on Clays, N. J. 29. 1878. FI. 
Group, 203. £/. 66. f. 1. 1892. iialenconks, Fl, eclen: Kreidef. 3: 
1884. Hollick, Trans. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 12: 234. pl. 6. f. 6. Pe 
ane Geol. Soc. Am. 7: 13. 1895. ese, Trans. Roy. Soc. Canada, 
: 63. pl. x1. f. 49; pl. 13. f. aga. 1894. 
eee in 1878 identified this species from the perishable 
material collected by Professor Cook at Sayreville, N. J., but it 
has not since been reported from the Raritan. None of New- 
berry’s Amboy Clay material was of this species, although he 
made particular search for it. It should be remembered, how- 
ever, that the majority of his specimens were from other horizons 
in the Raritan than the one at: Sayreville. This is a characteristic 
Cenomanian species occurring not only in the Dakota, but in beds 
of this age in Greenland and in Bohemia. 
MAGNOLIA TENUIFOLIA Lesq. (PLATE I, FIGURE 7.) 
A well-defined fragment of a large-leaved Magnolia with slen- 
der veins, referred to the above species because of other remains _ 
of this species found here. 
