151 
Sapotacites Huntii, sp. nov. 
Plate XIII, Pigs. 13, 13 a. 
Sp. Char. — S. foliis ang’uste oblong is, petiolatis coriaccis integerrimis, 
basim et apicem versus angustatis ; nervatione camptodroma ; nervo primario 
distincto recto ; nervis sccundariis tenuissimis, subangulis 10-50° orientibus ; 
nervis tertiariis vix conspicuis. 
Ohs. — This resembles Sapotacites lanceolatus, Ett., from the Tertiary 
beds of Ilaering and Sagor, but • differs from it by the secondary nerves 
which exhibit a few other characters, represented in Eig. 13. The net-work 
is very fine, and resembles that of many Sapotaceie. It is represented in 
Eig. 13a, magnified. The specimen from which the latter figure is taken 
is smaller than that of the former figure, and incomplete on its apex, but 
both are identical regarding the essential characters of the species. 
Locality and Horizon. — With the preceding species. 
Dialypetalae. 
All ALIA CEjE. 
Aralia Ereelingii, sp. nov. 
Plate XIII, Fig. 26. 
Sp. Char. — A. folii segmentis profunde partitis, laciniis subangulis 
acutissimis inter se divergentibus, majoribus basi contractis integerrimis, 
minoribus basi dilatatis ; nervis sccundariis laciniarum tenuibus flexuosis, 
subangulis 40-50° orientibus. 
Ohs. — The fossil represented in Eig. 2G doubtless belongs to a segment 
of the pinnatisect leaf of an Aralia. The segments which are on one and 
the same side diverge from one another at very acute angles (of barely 5°), or 
they run almost parallel to one another. The form of sinus which the segment 
define are, therefore, almost linear. The main segments or larger lobes are 
cuneately narrowed at their base, and are entire there. The smaller lateral 
lobes exhibit a broad base, which is likewise untoothed. The segments and 
their primary nerves diverge from the main primary nerve of the leaf at 
angles of 40° to 50°. The secondary nerves being thin and somewhat flexuous, 
are at the same angles of divergence. Only traces of the narrowly-meslied 
network are discernible. The texture of the leaf was coriaceous. 
