460 University Geological Survey of Kansas. 
Rhabdocarpos GOEP. AND BERGER. 
Rhabdocarpos sp. Pl. LXII, figs. 7, 8. 
These seeds are 6 to 7 mm. long, 3 or 4 mm. wide, marked by 
numerous longitudinal striz, and usually bordered by a thin 
layer representing a thin fleshy covering. One of the seeds. 
has retained its attachment to a branch, which is 114 cm. wide 
and has a roughly striated exterior. 
Formation and locality: Wellington shales, Banner City, 
Dickinson county, and the Wreford limestone, six miles west. 
of Reece. 
Cardiocarpon sp. Pl. LXIII, fig. 6. 
A few seeds of a species of this genus have been found. They 
are thin, broader than long. The apex acutely pointed; the 
nucleus indistinct. 
Formation and locality: Wellington shaics, Banner City, 
Dickinson county, and the Wreford limestone, six miles west. 
of Reece. : 
CONIFER A. 
Walchia STERNBERG. 
Walchia pinniformis (Schloth.) Sternberg. Pl. LXVI, figs. 1, 2. 
A species of Walchia, apparently W. pinniformis, occurs 
abundantly in the Wreford limestone. The locality from 
which the specimens were obtained is in the railroad cut six 
miles west of Reece. The plants are found at this locality on 
sandy shales between the layers of limestone. Among the 
small list of plants obtained here this species was found to be: 
the most abundant. The genus has not been definitely recog- 
nized among the plants from the Wellington, although some 
small branches from this formation are referred doubtfully to 
Walchia. 
Baiera sp. 
Some specimens from the Wreford limestone are referred 
doubtfully to the genus Baiera. The leaves are divided in a 
manner analogous to B. digitata (Brongn.) Heer. The divi- 
sions are, however, very much broader than are those of 
B. digitata. | 
Aspidiopsis coniferoides Potonie. Pl. LXVI, fig. 4. 
Potonié has described from the Permian of Thuringen,. 
under the name of Aspidiopsis coniferoides, a decorticated 
