— 501 — 
Fl. Gond. Syst., vol. iv, pt, 1, 1882, p. 34, pl. xii, fig. 4, pl. 
xx, fig. 3; Feistmantel, Fly Gond. Syst., vol. iv, pt. 2, 1886, 
p. 28, pl. 1A, fig. 2; Johnston, Geol Tasmania, 1888, p. 111, 
pl. ix, fig. 1; Feistmantel, Abh. Bohm. Gesell. Wiss., Prag. (7) 
vol. Ill, 1889, p. 36, pl. iv. fig. 6; Feistmantel, Mem. Geol. 
Surv. N. S. W., Palaeont., no. 3,1890, p. 121, pl. xiii, fig. 1 pl. 
xvi, fig. 3, 4, pl. xvii, figs. 1, 3, 4, 5, pl. xx. fig. 2; Jack & 
Etheridge Jr., Geol. & Pal. Queensland, 1892, p. 198, pl. xvi, 
fig. 8, pl. xvii, figs. 9, 10, pl. xviii, fig. 14; Zeiller, Bull. Soc. 
Geol. Fr., (3) vol, xxiv, 1896, p. 362, figs. 8—10, pl. xvi, figs. 
1—14; Seward, Quart. Jour. Geol. Soc., vol. lili, 1897, p. 248, 
pl. xxi, fig. 1, pl. xxiii, fig. 1; Seward, 2d Rept. Geol. Surv, 
Natal, 1904, p. 98, pl. iv, figs. 1, 5, 6; Arber, The Glosso- 
pteris Flora, 1905, p. 48, fig. 16, pl. ii, figs. 1—5, pl. iii, 
fig. 1, 2. 
1830. Glossopteris Browniana var. « australasica Bron- 
gniart, Hist. vég. foss. p. 223, pl Ixii, fig. 1; Bunbury, 
Quart. Jour. Geol. Soc., vol. xvii, 1861, p. 329, pl. viii, fig. 5. 
1847. Glossopterts linearis Mc Coy, Ann. & Mag. N. H., 
vol. xx, p. 154, pl. ix, fig. 55 Feistmantel, Palacontogr., 
Suppl. Ill, 1878, p. 91, pl. viii, figs. 1, 2, pl. xi, figs. 3—4, 
pl. xii, fig. 4. 
1849. Glossopteris elongata Dana, Wilkes Explor Exped., 
vol., X, p. 718, pl. xiii, fig. 4. 
Leaves usually not very large, spatulate, spatulate-oblong, oblong, 
or linear-spatulate, obtuse, or rounded at the apex, and narrowed 
downward to the petiolate base; midrib strong, persistent to or 
nearly to the apex ; nerovulles oblique, arched, not very close, anas- 
tomosing in a polygonal, rather open, elongated mesh, the areoles 
at the border being not greatly different from those near the 
midrib. 
None of the specimens in the collections before me exhibit the very 
broadly spatulate forms which appear to be so common in the New- 
castle beds, though they correspond well both in shape and in nerva- 
tion to some of the narrow forms from New South Wales, as well as to 
examples from various regions referred by different authors to the 
same species. In the specimen shown by Pl. vi, Fig, 6, we have a 
fragment of a leaf, from near Minas, that is strikingly similar in both 
