( 65 ) 
Heer records it from the Patoot beds of Greenland. New- 
berry’s specimens are from ‘‘near Keyport” and are prob- 
ably not from the Raritan, however in a table on page 135 he 
gives as an additional locality South Amboy, which is within 
the Raritan formation. Hollick (/. ¢.) records unmistakable 
remains of this species from the Matawan, but much search 
has not resulted in my finding it except one specimen which 
is doubtfully referred to this species (too poor to figure). 
Moriconia Deb. & Ett. Urweltl. Acrobryen Aachen, 
59. 1859. 
Moriconia CycLoToxon Deb. & Ett. Pl. 43. f. 4; 48. fr 
I~d. 
Moriconia cyclotoxon Deb. & Ett. Urweltl. Acrobryen 
Aachen (Denkschr. Wien. Akad. 17: 239), 59. p14. 7. ft 
23-27. 1859. Newb. Fl. Amboy Clays, 55. p/. ro. f. 
1-21. 1896. Heer, Fl. Foss. Arct. 37: 97. pl. 26. 
f. 78, under the name of Pecopteris Kudlisetensis; 6°: 
49. Pl. 33. f- 1-9; 7: 11. pl. 53. f. 10,106; pl. 54. f. 16 
{the latter figure probably represents a Brachyphyllum). 
Originally described from the clays at Aachen, Heer found 
it in the Atane and Patoot beds of Greenland and Disco 
Island, and Newberry in the Amboy Clays at South Amboy, 
N. J., where it is common. MHeer’s forms have the stem 
naked in a majority of cases ; the branchlets are about 21 mm. 
long and the widest is 4.5 mm. wide; one branchlet with the 
tip missing is still 36 mm. long but only 3 mm. wide. New- 
berry’s Amboy Clay specimens have some of the branchlets 
long and slender like the Arctic forms, but the majority are 
shorter and stouter, being 10 to 12 mm. in length by 4 mm. 
in width, and the stems are more uniformly leaved. Speci- 
mens from Staten and Block Islands recently reported by 
Hollick are also small. 
All of my specimens from Cliffwood have the main stem 
leaved ; my only complete branchlet is 34 mm. long by 9 mm. 
wide, in fact all of my specimens are nearly, or quite, twice 
as wide as any of the Amboy Clay or Greenland forms. 
