440 
PALAEONTOLOGY OF ILLINOIS. 
Lepidopiiloios laricinus, Sternb. 
Vers. 1, p. 23, PI. 11, fig. 2, 3, 4. 
It is not rare in the shales of the coal at Morris, in good, well characterized 
specimens. 
Lepidophloios protuberans, Sp. nov. 
/,%/•, * 9 
PI. xxvi, fig. 1 and 2. 
Stem arborescent with cicatrices somewhat distant, separated 
by thin, undulating, continuous wrinkles bordering the cauda; 
cicatrices double; the upper part or leaf scar is rounded up¬ 
wards and downwards, obtusely acute on both enlarged sides, 
marked by three vascular points, the middle of which is 
capped by a small, half round dot; the lower part like a broadly 
oval-rhomboidal wing, has both sides curving downwards as 
a prolongation of the borders of the leaf scar, and abruptly 
bent into a long pointed cauda, fig. 2. The wing is marked 
above the middle and under the leaf scar by a semi-lunar up¬ 
raised scar. The cicatrices are generally deeply immersed in 
the stone, and their outlines rarely discernible. They are 
often covered with a coat of thick carbonaceous matter, and 
their center marked by a prominent nose-like gibbosity. 
In the shales at Morris; collected by Mr. S. S. Strong. 
Genus LEPIDOSTROBUS, Brgt. 
Ills. Geol. Rep., vol. ii, p. 455. 
Lepidostrobus (species). 
PI. xxx, fig. 4 to 7. 
The figures represent in detail a specimen of a cone of Lepi- 
dodendron in concretions, which has its sporanges and spores 
still preserved in their primitive position. The form of the 
