212 The Upper Cretaceous Floras of the World 



Magnolia capellinii Berry 



Magnolia newberryi Berry 



Malapoenna horrellcnsis Berry 



Manihotites georgiana Berry 



Menispermites sp. 



Moriconia amcricana Berry 



Myrica cliffwoodensis Berry 



Myrica elegans Berry 



Myrsine borealis Heer 



Myrsine gaudini (Lesquereux) Berry 



Phaseolites formus Lesquereux 



Phragmites pratti Berry 



Pinus raritanensis Berry 



Pisonia cretacea Berry 



Pistia nordenskioldi (Heer) Berry 



Planera cretacea Berry 



Podozamites knowltoni Berry 



Podozamites lanccolatus (L. and H.) F. Braun 



Pterospermites carolinensis Berry 



Pterospermites crednerafolia Berry 



Quercus pratti Berry 



Quercus pseudowestfalica Berry? 



Salix eutaivcnsis Berry 



Salix fle.ruosa Newberry 



Salix lesquereuxii Berry 



Salix neivberryana Hollick 



Sassafras acutilobum Lesquereux 



Sequoia hctcrophylla Velenovsky 



Sequoia minor Velenovsky 



Sequoia reichenbachi (Geinitz) Heer 



Tumion carolinianum Berry 



SOUTH CAROLINA 



Although Cretaceous deposits were recognized by Vanuxem in South 

 Carolina as early as 1829, here again it was the fossiliferous marine beds 

 which were recognized, and the initial deposits of the Upper Cretaceous 

 cycle of sedimentation, partially continental in character, were referred 

 to the Eocene for a generation or more after Vanuxem's day. 



The presence of fossil plants in this state was announced by the writer ' 

 in 1907, and four years later 2 the general character of this flora was 



1 Berry, E. W. ( Johns Hopkins Univ. Circ, n. s., 1907, No. 7, pp. 79-91. 



2 Berry, E. W., Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, vol. xxxviii, 1911, pp. 419-424. 



