428 BOTANICAL GAZETTE [DECEMBER 
Araha Browniana Heer from the Tertiary of Greenland, which 
may be compared with European leaves from the Oligocene of 
St. Zacharie and the Miocene of Armissan. 
Aralia transversinervia Sap. & Marion, described by Hollick 
(who notes its resemblance to Ficus) from Long Island as iden- 
tical with Saporta and Marion’s Gelinden leaf. 
Aralia lasseniana Lx., from the Eocene (?) and Miocene (?) 
of California, which may be compared with leaves from the 
Sezanne flora. 
Aralia coriacea Velen., identified by Hollick from Marthas 
Vineyard, the type from the Cenomanian of Bohemia. 
SPECIES NOT INCLUDED in the foregoing sections are: 
Aralia Fontainei Kn., from the Potomac, the remains of which 
are too poor for accurate diagnosis. 
Aralia triloba Newb.,which represents a ternately or pinnately 
parted leaf from the Fort Union group, which is evidently 
ancestral to the modern North American Aralias. 
Aralia ? Waigattensis Heer, which represents a_ probably 
pinnate leaf of uncertain affinities from the Patoot beds of 
Greenland. 
Aralia dissecta Lx., a large much lobed leaf from the Green 
River group. 
Aralia Wrightii Kn., represented by incomplete remains from 
_ the Miocene of Yellowstone Park. 
DovuBTFUL REMAINS include: 
Aralia sp. Dawson, from the Mill Creek, which has been 
included with Aralia Saportana because Dawson thought that it 
might be that leaf. 
Two forms of Aralia sp. determined by Knowlton from the 
Laramie of Wyoming; two by the same author from the Upper 
Eocene of the John Day Basin, Oregon; and one from the 
Miocene of Yellowstone Park. 
The foregoing table shows the relationship of these leaves a5 
I conceive them. 
Passaic, N. J. 
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