Maryland Geological Survey 215 



precisely correlated with beds in adjacent states. 1 The first record of 



fossil plants is an incidental reference by the late D. W. Langdon 2 to their 



occurrence at Chimney Bluff, on the Chattahoochee Eiver. A brief note 



on the Cretaceous flora of Georgia was published by the writer 3 in 1910, 



and a complete account appeared four years later. 4 Several horizons are 



represented. A considerable flora has been described from different 



localities in the Eutaw formation, considered by the writer to correspond 



with a part of the Black Creek formation of the Carolinas and to be of 



Turonian age. The following species have been recorded : 



Andromeda cretacea Lesquereux ? 



Andromeda wardiana Lesquereux 



Androvettia elegans Berry 



Aralia eutawensis Berry 



Araucaria bladenensis Berry 



Araucaria jeffreyi Berry 



Brachyphyllum macrocarpum formosum Berry 



Cinnamomum heerii Lesquereux ? 



Cinnamomum newberryi Berry 



Eucalyptus angusta Velenovsky 



Ficus crassipes Heer 



Ficus krausiana Heer 



Ficus ovatifolia Berry 



Juglans arctica Heer ? 



Magnolia boulayana Lesquereux 



Magnolia capellinii Heer 



Malapoenna horrellensis Berry 



Manihotites georgiana Berry 



Menispermites variabilis Berry 



Paliurus upatoiensis Berry 



Phragmites pratti Berry 



Salix eutawensis Berry 



Salix flexuosa Newberry 



Salix lesquereuxii Berry 



Sequoia reichenbachi (Geinitz) Heer 



Tumion carolinianum Berry ? 



Zizyphus laurifolius Berry 



1 Stephenson, L. W., Cretaceous. Bull. 26, Geol. Survey Ga., 1911, pp. 66-215. 

 Cretaceous Deposits of the Eastern Gulf Region. Prof. Paper U. S. 



Geol. Survey, No. 81, 1914, pp. 9-40, tables 1-9. 



2 Langdon, D. W., in Rept. on Geol. of Coastal Plain of Ala., 1894, p. 440. 



3 Berry, E. W., Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, vol. xxxvii, 1910, pp. 503-511, 2 tf. 



4 The Upper Cretaceous Flora of Georgia. Prof. Paper U. S. Geol. 



Survey, No. 84, 1914, pp. 99-128, pi. xv-xxiv. 



