( 160 ) 
I have been unable to identify this leaf satisfactorily with any 
living or extinct genus with which I am familiar; but the family 
relationship appears to be with the Proteaceae, so far as the 
nervation is concerned. Many of the broad leaved species in 
certain genera belonging to this family possess the type of nerva- 
tion indicated in our specimen, and for purposes of comparison 
I have depicted (see Plate 165, Figure 2) a leaf of Embothrium 
grandiflora R. Br., a living Peruvian species, with which the 
relationship of our specimen is presaged in the name adopted. 
Locality: Glen Cove, N. Y. Hollick, Berry and Bibbins, June 
23, 1905. 
NYMPHAEACEAE 
Netumso Kemper (Hollick) Hollick 
(PLaTE 166, Fics. 3, 4) 
Nelumbo Kempii (Hollick) Hollick, Bull. New York Bot. Gard. 3: 
412, pl. 74, f. 1, 2, pl. 75, pl. 76, pl. 77, f. 1. 1904 
a Kempit Hollick, Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 20: 169, 
pl. 14 
This ae is Saute abundantly represented in the Cretaceous 
flora of Long Island, and the leaves vary greatly in size, as may be 
seen by comparison between the fragment of the large one shown 
in Figure 4 and the complete small one shown in Figure 3. These 
two specimens represent the largest and the smallest specimens 
thus far found. The former must have had a diameter of at least 
4.5 dm., while the latter has a diameter of only 4.75 cm. 
Locality: Glen Cove, N. Y. (Plate 166, Fig. 3). Howard J. 
Shannon, 1912. 
King’s gravel pit, Roslyn, N. Y. (Plate 166, Fig. 4). Hollick, 
Sept. 26, 1906. 
MaAcNOLIACEAE 
Macno.uia Loncipes Newberry? 
(PLaTE 167, Fic. 1) 
“ Magnolia longipes Newb. mss.,” Hollick, Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 
21: 60, pl. 178, f. 1, 3. 1894. 
Magnolia longipes Newb., Monog. U.S. Geol. Surv. 26 (Fl. Amboy 
Clays): 76, pl. 54, f. 1-3. 
It is unfortunate that neither this nor either of the two specimens 
