100 
related to Heliconia or other American representatives of the family 
Musaceae; or does it appear to be related to Geonomites, Manicaria, 
or any other palm type. The only other possibility is that it may represent 
some type of fern, and that the enlarged spots represent some sort of 
sporangial apparatus, the objection to this being their great irregularity 
in position and size. 
SabaUtes campbeUi (Newberry) Lesquereux 
Sdbal campbeUi Newberry, U.S. Geol. Surv., Mon. 35, p. 27, PI. 21, figs. 
1, 2, 1898; Dawson, Trans. Roy. Soc., Can., 2nd ser., vol. 1, sec. 4, 
p. 142, fig. 7, 1895. 
SabaUtes campbeUi Lesquereux, Tert. FI., p. 113, 1878; Penhallow, Rept. 
Tert. PI. Brit. Col., p. 85, 1908. 
Single rays of what appears to be this species are contained in the 
collection from Rurrard inlet and Kitsilano. More complete material 
was described by Dawson from the former locality and correlated with 
the type of the species, which came from the Puget group of Washington 
(state). 
Class, DICOTYLEDONAE 
Order, Myricales 
Family, myricaceae 
Myrica uglowi Berry n. sp. 
Plate XVIII, figure 1 
Leaves of small size, elongate elliptical in general form, with a shortly 
pointed tip, and a broadly cuneate base. Sub-lobate through the develop- 
ment of four or five large dentate teeth on either margin. These lobules 
are unsymmetrical and directed upward, separated by narrow acute 
sinuses that extend for about one-third of the distance inward toward 
the midrib. Texture sub-coriaceous. Petiole short, stout, and curved, 
about 1-5 mm. in length. Midrib stout, prominent on the under side 
of the leaf. Secondaries relatively stout and prominent, diverging from 
the midrib at angles somewhat greater than 45 degrees, a craspedodrome 
one runs to each marginal tooth or lobule, and one or two camptodrome 
ones are intercalated between adjacent craspedodrome secondaries. 
Length about 2*5 cm., maximum width about 1 cm. 
This handsome, small species is not close to any previously described 
forms, either fossil or recent, but presents the unmistakable generic features 
of Myrica. It comes from Joseph creek, B.C. 
Comptonia predryandroides Berry n.sp. 
Plate X, figure 6 
Myrica (Comptonia) cuspidata Dawson, Trans. Roy. Soc., Can., vol. 8, 
sec. 4, p. 80, fig. 9, 1890 (not Lesquereux). 
Comptonia dryandroides Penhallow, Rept. Tert. PI. Brit. Col., p. 46, 1908. 
