90 FLORA OF SOUTHERN NEW YORK AND NEW ENGLAND. 



species, biit no leaves of the genus have been found associated with them either 

 there or on Marthas Vineyard, where our specimens were found. 



Locality: Gay Head, Marthas Vineyard. Collected by David White. Speci- 

 mens in U. S. Nat. Mus. 



Family SAPINDACE^. 

 Sapindus IMPERFECTUS Holhck. 

 PI. XXXIII, fig. 1.5. 

 Sapindus imperfectus Hollick, Bull. New York Bot. Gard., vol. 3, 1904, p. 415, pi. 78, fig. 4. 



This species is very closely allied to S. morrisoni Lesq.," and may perhaps be 

 regarded merely as a form of that species. 



Locality: Manhassett Neck, Long Island. Collected by A. E. Anderson. Speci- 

 men in Mus. New York Bot. Gard. 



Sapindus morrisoni uesquereux. 



PI. XXXIII, figs. 16-20. 



Sapindus Morrisoni Lesq., Cret. and Tert. FL, 1S83, p. 83, pi. 16, figs. 1,2; White, Am. Jour. Sci., vol. 39, 1890, 

 p. 99, pi. 2, fig. 12; Hollick, Trans. New York Acad. Sci., vol. 11 , 1892, p. 103, pi, 3, fig. .5; ibid., vol. 12, 1893, 

 p. 23.5, pi. 6, fig. 3; Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, vol. 21, 1894, p. 57, pi. 179, fig. 8; Bull. Geol, Soc. Am., vol. 7 

 1895, p. 13; Annals New Y'ork Acad. Sci., vol. 11, 1898, p. 422, pi. 36, fig. 4; Berry, Bull. New York 

 Bot. Card., vol. 3, 1903, p. 83, pi. 47, figs. 2, 3; Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, vol. 31, 1904, p. 78. 



The great variety of shape and size in this species is well represented in our 

 specimens. Figs. 18 and 19 are about the average in size and are most nearly like 

 Lesquereux's type figures (loc. cit.) ; fig. 19 is like his specimens subsequently fig- 

 ured;^ fig. 16 is somewhat broader than any other specimen which I have seen 

 depicted, but it hardly diilers to a sufficient extent to be regarded as a new species, 

 and fig. 17 may be satisfactorily compared with some of the forms figured by Heer 

 from the Cretaceous of Greenland,"^ especially with his fig. 8 (loc. cit.), in which the 

 finer nervation is suggestive of some other genus, as it is in our fig. 17. In fact, if it 

 were not for the characteristic unsymmetrical base in our specimen — rounded on one 

 side and cuneate on the other — I should probably have considered it under some 

 other generic name. 



Locality: Glen Cove, Long Island, PI. XXXIII, figs. 16-18. Collected by 

 Arthur Hollick. Specimens in Mus. New York Bot. Gard. 



Princess Bay, Staten Island, PL XXXIII, fig. 19. Collected by Arthur Hol- 

 lick. Specimen in Mus. Staten Island Assn. Arts and Sci. 



Tottenville, Staten Island, PI. XXXIII, fig. 20. Collected by Arthur Holhck. 

 Specimen in Mus. Staten Island Assn. Arts and Sci. 



oCret. and Tert. FL, 1883, p. 83, pi. 16, figs. 1, 2. 



!>Mon. U. S. Geol. Survey, vol. 17 (Fl. Dak. Gr.), 1892, pi. 35, flgs. 1, 2. 



cFl. Foss. Arct., vol. 6 (abth. 2), 1882, pi. 43, fig. la; pi. 44, flg. 8. 



