98 THE FLORA OF THE AMBOY CLAYS. 
I have no memoranda which would guide me in knowing what Dr. 
Newberry’s impressions were regarding the specimen, nor is any locality 
indicated.—A. H. 
Order AQUIFOLIACEZE. 
ILEx? ELoNGaTA Newb. n. sp. 
Pl. XVIUL, figs. 1, 5. 
Leaf lanceolate, 10 long by 3° wide, margins set with remote spiny 
teeth. 
Only two specimens of this plant have yet been obtained, and they 
are in an imperfect state of preservation. They show enough, however, 
to prove that they are distinct from any other leaf in the collection, and 
are remarkable for the series of spiny teeth with which the margins are 
defended. In this respect they closely resemble several species of Lex, 
and we may assign them a provisional place in that genus. 
Locality: Sayreville. 
Inex? ovata Newb. n. sp. 
Pl. XVI, fig. 2. 
Leaves small, lanceolate in outline, blunt-pointed above, narrowed 
below, margins set with numerous small and large subacute teeth. 
We have but a single leaf of this species in the collection. It is, 
however, distinct from any others and therefore deserves enumeration. 
Its reference to the genus Ilex is only provisional, and its true botanical 
relations can be determined only by the discovery of more material. 
Locality: Sayreville. 
Order CELASTRACEA. 
CELASTRUS ARCTICA Heer. 
Pl. XIII, figs. 8-18. 
Celastrus arctica Heer, Fl. Foss. Arct., Vol. VII, p. 40, Pl. L.XI, figs. 5d, 5e. 
Professor Heer in his Flora Fossilis Arctica, Vol. VII, Pl. LXI, fig, 
5d, represents a small lanceolate leaf with remotely toothed margins, which 
he compares with the Tertiary Celastrus Mttingshausent and calls Celastrus 
