THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporatipn http://www.archive.org/details/fossilplantstextOOsewarich CAMBRIDGE BIOLOGICAL SERIES FOSSIL PLANTS CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS C. F. CLAY, Managek iLonUon : FETTER LANE, E.G. ^EOmburg]^ : 100 PRINCES STREET lottHon: H. K. LEWIS AND CO. Ltd., 136, GOWER STREET, W.C. fLontJon : WILLIAM WESLEY AND SON, 28, ESSEX STREET, STRAND j^eb) Soiit: G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS »ombag, Calcutta anD iKatirag: MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd. m.axanto : J. M. DENT AND SONS, Ltd. 8rt)ftg0: THE MARUZEN-KABUSHIKI-KAISHA All rights reserved CHARLES RENE ZEILLER Membre de I'lnstitut Inspecteur general des Mines Professeur k I'lficole Nat^e Superieure des Mines (1847—1915) FOSSIL PLANTS A TEXT-BOOK FOR STUDENTS OF BOTANY AND GEOLOGY BY A. C. SEWABD M.A., F.R.S., Hon. Sc.D. Dubmn PROFESSOR OP BOTANY IN THE UNIVERSITY; MASTER OF DOWNING COLLEGE AND HONORARY FELLOW OF EMMANUEL COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE WITH 253 ILLUSTRATIONS VOLUME III PTERIDOSPERMEAE, CYCADOFILICES, CORDAITALES, CYCADOPHYTA CAMBRIDGE : AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS 1917 LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS TO THE MEMORY OF MY FRIEND CHARLES REN]^ ZEILLER ILLUSTRIOUS AS A MAN OF SCIENCE AND A NOBLE-HEARTED GENTLEMAN WHOM TO KNOW WAS TO REVERE PEEFACE TN the Preface to Volume II publislied in 1910 I rashly stated -^ that it was my intention "to devote such space as is avail- able within the limits of a text-book to the neglected subject of the geographical distribution of plants at different stages in the history of the earth," also that Volume III would be completed with as little delay as possible. Though nearly seven years have elapsed since the publication of the second volume it may fairly be said that the delay is not entirely due to causes which it was in my power to control. The subject of geographical distribution receives no connected treatment in Volumes III and IV for the simple reason that I underestimated the space required for the description of the Gymnosperms. The alter- natives were either to insert a greatly compressed survey of the successive floras of the world at the end of Volume IV or to attempt a fuller and less technical treatment of the subject in a separate book. In choosing the latter course I am conscious that a further obligation is undertaken which it may not be possible to fulfil; but the risk is deliberately taken. Volume IV is in the press and will, it is hoped, be published before the end of 1917. It is a pleasant duty to repeat my thanks to many friends who have helped me in various ways. Dr Kidston generously and without reserve allowed me access to his splendid collection of Palaeozoic plants, and the frequent occurrence of his name in the list of illustrations shows how freely I have availed myself 87-118 VI PREFACE of his kindness. He has read some of the chapters and greatly assisted me by his friendly criticism and encouragement. By reading the proofs of this volume Dr Scott has further increased my already large debt to him. It is impossible to thank him adequately ; he not only corrected many careless mistakes but by wise counsel and advice he rendered me a service which I greatly appreciate. The exchange of views with Prof. Zeiller has been a constant source of profit and enjoyment, and it is hard to realise that the completed book will not receive his kindly criticism. He was a singularly unselfish and generous colleague, always ready to help fellow workers, and he had the faculty in an unusual degree of influencing those who had the privilege of his friendship by his sound advice and lovable personality. The death of Count Solms-Laubach has deprived Palaeo- botany of one of its most learned and strongest supporters. In common with all students of fossil plants I owe much to the critical treatment of the subject in the Einleitung in die Paldophytologie. Prof. Jeffrey has very kindly given me several photographs and sections which have been of great service, and I am similarly indebted to Prof. Zalessky.. To Prof. Nathorst my thanks are due for the great interest he has taken in my work and for his generosity in providing drawings and showing to me many of the treasures in the famous Stockholm Museum. Prof. Bertrand and Prof. Lignier freely supplied photographs and drawings of specimens in their possession, and I am particularly grateful to them for the willingness with which they always responded to my requests. Through the death of Prof. Lignier in March 1916 Paleo- botany has been deprived of another original thinker who devoted himself with whole-hearted enthusiasm to botanical research and for many years faithfully served the University PREFACE VU of Caen : he was a generous friend to whom one never appealed in vain for assistance. Through the kindness of the Director of the Indian Geological Survey I have been able to examine several fossils from the Calcutta Museum described by Oldham and Morris and by Feistmantel. With the Director's permission several photographs and drawings made for a forthcoming paper to be published by the Indian Survey are reproduced in this volume. I take this opportunity of thanking friends in Australia who recently afforded me facilities for examining fossil plants in their charge, and I would especially thank Mr A. B. Walkom of the University of Brisbane, who has recently undertaken an investigation of the rich plant-beds in the Ipswich district, for all that he did to enable me to make the most of a very short time available for palaeobotanical work. For the loan of specimens and for other help I am indebted to Prof. Bayly Balfour, Prof. Bower, Prof. Margaret Benson, Prof. Oliver, Sir David Prain, Dr Smith Woodward, Prof. Weiss, the Director of the Geological Survey, Dr A. H. Church, Dr Arber, and other friends. I would also acknowledge a debt, by no means inconsiderable, to my Colleague Mr Hamshaw Thomas. Among younger friends in the Cambridge Botany School to whom I am indebted I wish particularly to thank Miss Kuth Holden, Miss Bancroft, Mr Sayers, Mr Dutt and others who have rendered me willing help. In the List of Illustrations mention is made of Corporate Bodies and individuals from whom blocks have been obtained, and I am grateful to them for readily responding to my applications. My Wife, thpugh prevented by more urgent calls in the later stages of my task from giving as much time to the illustra- tions as in the two former volumes, has contributed several a5 Vlll PREFACE drawings, and my daughter Phyllis Seward has also given me much help in preparing drawings from previously published figures. In spite of the vigilance and wise counsel of many friends numerous blemishes remain and for these the author is alone responsible. A. C. SEWARD. Downing College Lodge, February 10, 1917. Note. The letters A and B added to references in the footnotes indicate that the works will be found in the Bibhographies at the end of Volumes I and II. TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER XXVIII CYCADALES (Recent). Pp. 1—34. CHAPTER XXIX PTERIDOSPERMEAE (continued from Volume ii.). Pp. 35—85. PAGE I. LYGINOPTERIDEAE 35-85 Lyginopteris 35-70 Telangium 54, 55 ; Lagenostoma 55-64 ; Lagenospermum 64-66 ; Pterispermostrohus 66, 67. Heterangium 70-85 Sphaerostoma 78-81. CHAPTER XXX II. MEDULLOSEAE 86-165 i. MeduUosa 86-109, 156-163 Myeloxylon \0Q-\\0 ; Neuropteris 110-117; Alethopteris Rwdi Linopteris \\^ ; Trigo7iocarpus 117-124:; Codono- theca 124-126 ; SchUtzia 126-128 ; Whittleseya 128- 131 ; Dolerophyllum 132-139 ; Ottoharia 139-141 ; Strohilites 141, 142. ii. Colpoxylon 142-145 iii. Rhexoxylon 146-149 iv. Sutcliffia 149-156 General considerations suggested hy the anatomical features of Medullosa . ' 156-163 II. A. STELOXYLEAE 163-165 Steloxylon 163-165 CHAPTER XXXI PTERIDOSPERMEAE. (Foliage and seeds.) Pp. 166—174. Pecopteris Pluckeneti 166-168 ; Eremopteris artemisaefolia 169-172 ; Wardia 172, 173 ; Adiantites hellidulus and Lagenospermum Arheri 173, 174. CONTENTS CHAPTER XXXII CYCADOFILICES. Pp. 175—213. I. MEGALOXYLEAE Megaloxylon II. RHETINANGIEAE Rhetinangium . III. STENOMYELEAE Stenomyelon . IV. CYCADOXYLEAE Cycadoxylon Ptychoxylon V. CALAMOPITYEAE Calamopitys Kalymma . Eristophyton . VL CLADOXYLEAE Cladoxylon Volkelia . VII. PROTOPITYEAE Protopitys PAGE 175-180 175-180 181-18a 181-183 183-185 183-185 185-190 185-187 187-190 190-200 190-196 194-196 197-200 200-210 201-207 208-210 210-213 210-213 CHAPTER XXXIII CORDAITALES. Pp. 214—299 A. POROXYLEAE Poroxylon B. CORDAITEAE Cordaites Noeggerathiopsis 238-243 ; Rhiptozamites 244, 245 ; Phylladoderma 244 ; EurypJu/llum 245 ; Artisia 246-248 ; Badoxylon 248-260 ; Metacordaites 260, 261 ; Cordaianthus 264-270 ; Mesoxylon 270-275 ; Pelourdea 277-281 ; Niponophyllum 282, 283 ; Titanophyllum 283, 284. CHAPTER XXXIV PITYEAE Pitys Archaeopitys Callixylon Coenoxylon Parapitys Mesopitys Antarcticoxylon 214-219 214-219 219-284 219-265 285-299 285-289 290 291-293 293, 294 294, 295 295, 296 296-299 CONTENTS XI CHAPTER XXXV PALAEOZOIC GYMNOSPERMOUS SEEDS. Pp. 300—365. PAGE I. Lagenostomales 308-318 Physostoma 309-312 ; Conostoma 313-316 ; Sphae- rostoma 316 ; Lagenostoma 316 ; Gnetopsis 317, 318. II. Trigonocarpales 318-332 Trigonocarpus 319-321 ; Tripterospennum 321 ; Ptychotesta 321 ; Hexapterospermum 321-323; Polypterospermum 323 ; Pachytesta 323-326 ; Stephanospermum 326-329 ; Polylophospemium 329, 330 ; Codonospermum 330, 331 ; Aetheo- testa 331, 332 ; Eriotesta 332 ; Gaudrya 332. III. Cardiocarpales 332-356 Cardiocarpus 338-340 ; Cyclospermum 340, 341 ; Cycadinocarpus 341 ; Rhabdocarpus and Rhab- dospermum 341-345 ; Mitrospermum 345, 346 ; Diplotesta 346 ; Leptocaryon 346, 347 ; Taxo- spermum 347 ; Compsotesta 347, 348 ; Sama- ropsis 348-354 ; Cordaicarpus 354-356. IV. Miscellaneous Seeds 356-365 i. Hexagonocarpus 356, 357 ; Decagonocarpus 357; Polypterocarpus 357, 358 ; Rhynchogonium 358-360 ; Boroviczia 360 ; Diplopterotesta 360, 361 ; Musocarpus 361 ; Holcospermum 361-363. ii. Malacotesta 363 ; Thysanotesta 364 ; Oarpo- lithus 364, 365 ; Microspermum 365. CHAPTER XXXVI CYCADOPHYTA (Fossil). Pp. 366—420. BENNETTITALES Cycadeoidea Cycadella Amphibennettites Vectia 367-420 367-417 417, 418 418 CHAPTER XXXVII BENNETTITALES {continued) Williamsonia Wielandiella Williamsoniella Cycadocephalus Weltrichia . 421-477 421-463 463-467 467-473 473-475 475-477 XU CONTENTS CHAPTER XXXVIII CYCADOPHYTA. Pp. 478—506. i. Bucklandia 480-490 ; Cycadeomyelon 490, 491 ; Colymbetes 491-494 ; Cycadeolepis 494-496. ii. Carpolithus 497-500 ; Cycadospadix 500, 501 ; Beania 502 ; Zamiostrobus, Cycadeostrobus 503- 505; Androstrobus 505, 506. CHAPTER XXXIX CYCADOPHYTA (Fronds). Pp. 507—591. PAGE I. Bennettitales 512-566 Ptilophyllum 512-529; Zamites 529-537; Otoza- mites 537-545 ; Dictyozamites 546-548 ; Ptero- phyllum 548-558 ; Cycadites and Pseudocycas 558-566. II. NiLSSONIALES 566-587 Nilssonia 566-578 ; Ctenis 578-583 ; Pseudoctenis 584-587. III. Incertae sedis 587-591 Sphenozamites 587-589 ; Plagiozamites 589, 590 ; Cycadorachis 590, 591. List of Works referred to in the Text (Vols. Ill & IV) . 592-639 Index 640-656 LIST OF ILLUSTEATIONS Several of the illustrations are printed from blocks for which I am indebted to learned societies or to individuals. The sources from which cliches were obtained are mentioned within square brackets. The names of donors of photographs or drawings are added after the descriptions of the figures. Frontispiece. Charles Rene Zeiller. From a photograph given to me by Madame Zeiller. FIG. PAGE 377. Cycas circinalis. A. MaUns Smith 2 378. Cycas revoluta. [G. R. Wieland.] 3 379. Encephalartos horridus 3 380. Cycas circinalis. [Encyclopaedia Britannica.] ... 4 381. Cycas revoluta and Zamia Loddigesii 5 382. Encephalartos Ohellinx^kii. [Camb. Phil. Soc] . . . 11 383. Cycas siamensis. [Encyclopaedia Britannica.] ... 12 384. Cycas circinalis 13 385. Cycas Micholitzii and Zamia angustifolia . . . . 14 386. Encephalartos Altensteinii ; Dioon edule. S. M. Wadham . 15 387. Cycadean Fronds 16 388. Zamia Wallisii 17 389. Zamia integrifolia. [Camb. Univ. Press.] . . . . 18 390. Zamia Loddigesii 18 391. Bov:enia spectabilis. [Encyclopaedia Britannica.] . 20 392. Cycas pectinata, C. Riuminiana, C. angulata, Enceplmlartos, and Stangeria 21 393. Stangeria, Encephalartos, and Ceratozamia .... 22 394. Macrozamia Preissii. [Camb. Univ. Press.] ... 23 395. Zamia fioridana. [G. R. Wieland.] 24 396. Dioon edule, Cycas circinalis, etc., Encephalartos, Bowenia, Macrozamia, Microcycas ....... 26 397. Stangeria paradoxa. [New Phytologist; A. G. Tansley.] . 29 398. Macrozamia 29 399. Cycadean fohar bundles . 31 400. Cycas Micholitzii. [Camb. Phil. Soc] .... 33 XIV LIST OF rLLUSTRATIONS FTQ. PAGE 401. Lyginodendron Landsburgii. R. Kidston .... 37 402. Lyginopteris oldhamia. [Camb. Phil. Soc] ... 39 403-405. Lyginopteris oldhamia . ... . .41, 44, 48 406. Lyginopteris oldhamia. F. W. Oliver .... 49 407. Crossotheca Hoeninghausi. R. Kidston and other sources . 53 408. Lagenospermun Sinclairi ; Lagenostoma ; Calymmatotheca Stangeri ; Crossotheca Hoeninghausi . . . . bl 409. Lagenostoma 58 410. Lyginopteris oldhamia 69 411. 412. Heterangium Grievii 73, 76 413. Sphenopteris elegans ....... 78 414. Sphaerostoma ovale 79 415. Heterangium Grievii; H. tiliaeoides; Lyginopteris root . 82 416. Medullosa (stem-anatomy) 92 417. Medullosa centrofilis . . 96 418. Myeloxylon radiatum ; Medullosa stellata ; M. Leuckarti . 103 419. Medullosa Leuckarti 104 420. Myeloxylon radiatum ; Medullosa anglica, and Medullosa sp. 107 421. Potoniea adiantiformis ; Linopteris obliquu ; Neuropteris heterophylla Ill 422. Neuropterocarpus Kidstoni. [Edinburgh Royal Society.] . 114 423-426. Trigonocarpus Parkinsoni . . . .118, 120, 121 427. Codonotheca caduca. [New Phytologist.] .... 125 428. Whittlesey a elegans ; W, hrevifolia 128 429. Whittleseya elegans . 130 430-432. Dolerophyllum OoeppeHi 133, 134, 137 433. Ottokaria hengalensis. [Indian Geol. Survey.] . . .140 434. Strohilites Milleryensis 141 435. 436. Colpoxylon aeduense . 143 437, 438. Rhexoxylon africanum 146, 148 439, 440. Sutcliffia insignis ...... 150, 151 441. Steloxylon Ludwigii ,163 442. Pecopteris Pluckeneti . . . . . . .167 443. Eremopteris artemisaefolia ; Samaropsis acuta . . .170 444. Samaropsis acuta. R. Kidston 171 445. Wardia fertilis 172 446-448. Megaloxylon Scotti. [Camb. Phil. Soc] 176-178 449, 450. Rhetinangium Arheri. W. T. Gordon . . .182 451. Stenomyelon tuedianum 183 452. Stenomyelon tuedianum. R. Kidston . . . . .185 453. Ptychoxylon Levyi ; Cycadoxylon Fremyi ; C robustum . 188 454. 455. Calamopitys Saturni. M. Zalessky . . . 191, 192 456. Kalymma grandis .195 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS XV FIG. PAGE 457. Eristophyton fasciculare 197 458. Eristophyton Beinertianum. M. Zalessky . . . .199 459. Cladoxylon mirabile ; G. duhium ; C. taeniatum ; Syncardia pusilla 202 460. Cladoxylon Kidstoni ; C. mirabile 206 461. Volkelia refracta 209 462. Protopitys Buchiana 211 463. Poroxylon Edwardsii. C. E. Bertrand and P. W. Oliver . 216 464. Poroxylon Edwardsii ; P. Boysseti. C. E. Bertrand . . 218 465. Cordaites leaf. (C. Felicis.) R. Kidston . . . .228 466. Cordaites principalis ; Artisia transversa, R. Kidston . 231 467. Cordaites lin^ulatus 234 468. Cordaites {Rhizo-Cordaites) ; Cordaites circularis ; Cordaites sp. cf. C. Lacoei ; C. crassifoliiis 237 469. Cordaites aequalis ; C. Clerci, M. Zalessky . . . 239 470. Cordaites (Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi. G. R. Wieland . . 241 471. Cordaites {Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi. [Gteological Society.] . 241 472. Cordaites {Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi. [Geol. Surv. India.] . 242 473. Cordaites stem 246 474. 475. Dadoxylon materiarum 257 476. Dadoxylon Pedroi 259 477. Cordaites root 262 478. Cordaites ? root. T. N. Leslie 263 479. Cordaianthus. F. E. Weiss 265 480. Cordaianthus Pitcairniae ; C. Volkmanni .... 266 481. Cordaianthus Grand' Euryi ; C. Williamsoni ; C. Zeilleri. C. E. Bertrand 268 482. Cordaianthus microsporangia 270 483. Mesoxylon Sutcliffii 272 484. Pelourdea vogesiaca. [Geologists' Assoc.] . . 279 485. Titanophylluin Grand Euryi 284 486. 487. Pitys antiqua 286, 287 488. Pitys primaeva . . 288 489. Callixylon Trifdievi. M. Zalessky 292 490. Mesopitys Tchihatcheffi 296 491. Antarcticoxylon Priestley i 298 492. Diagram of a synthetic type of seed 303 493. Lagenostoma ovoides ; L.Lomaxi; Physostoma elegans ; Telan- gium Scotti; Stephanospermum akenioides . . . .311 494. Stephanospermum akenioides; Conostoma oblonga; Gnetop- sis elliptica; Physostoma elegans; Mitrospermum compres- sum 314 495. Polypterospermum Renaultii ; Ptychotesta tenuis; Polylopho- XVI LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FIG. spermum stephanense ; Hexapterospermumstenopterum; Di plotesta avellana ; D. Grand' Euryana ; Taxospermum Griineri 496. Pachytesta incrassata ; Polypterocarpus anglicus 497. Pachytesta 498. Codonospermum olivaeforme ; Aetheotesta elliptica 499. Samaropsis emarginata 500. Cardiocarpus drupaceus var. expansus . 501. Cardiocarpus sclerotesta; Rhahdocarpus cyclocaryon 502. Samaropsis fluitans ; 8. emarginata ; S. hicaudata ; S, Seixasi ; S. barcellosa; S. Newberryi ; Gordaicarpus Cordai 503. Samaropsis Leslii 504. Samaropsis Milleri. [Geol. Surv. India.] 505. Gordaicarpus Cordai 506. Holcospermum sulcatum; Codonospermum anomalum; Di plopterotesta spitzhergensis ; Gnetopsis elliptica; Thysano testa sagittula ; Rhynchogonium costatum ; Boroviczia Karpinskii ; Hexagonocarpus Noeggerathi ; Ehabdosper mum tunicatum 507. Cycadeoidea marylandica. [G. R. Wieland.] 508. 509. Cycadeoidea Wielandi [G. R. Wieland.] 510. Cycadeoidea sp. ..... 511. Cycadeoidea Gibsoniana .... 512. Cycadeoidea ingens. [G. R. Wieland.] 513-515. Cycadeoidea. [G. R. Wieland.] 516. Cycadeoidea Dartoni 517-523. Cycadeoidea Gibsoniana 524-527. Cycadeoidea (Bennettites) Morierei. [O. Lignier.] 528-532. Cycadeoidea dacotensis. [G. R. Wieland.] 533. Cycadeoidea colossalis. [G. R. Wieland.] 534. Cycadeoidea Reichenba^hiana. [A. Rothpletz.] 535-537. Cycadeoidea gigantea. [Geological Soc] 538. Cycadeoidea micromyela .... 539. Cycadeoidea Jenneyana (?) [G. R. Wieland.] 640. Vectia luccombensis. [Trustees of the British Museum.] 541-543. Williamsonia gigas 544. Williamsonia gigas. [Yorkshire Nat. Union.] 545. Williamsonia gigas. A. G. Nathorst. . 646, 547. Williamsonia gigas .... 648. Williamsonia gigas. O. Lignier. . . . 549, 550. Williamsonia gigas. [Cambridge PhU. Soc] 651. Williamsonia spectabilis, A. G. Nathorst. . 662. Williamsonia spectabilis. [Geological Soc] . PAGE 322 324 325 330 337 339 340 350 352 353 355 359 373 375, 376 377 377 378 380-383 . 384 387-394 397^02 404-408 . 410 . 411 413, 414 . 415 . 416 . 419 424-427 . 428 . 429 430, 431 . 432 435, 436 . 437 . 438 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS XVU FIG. PAGE 553, 554. Williamsonia Leckenbyi. A. G. Nathorst. . . 439, 440 555, 556. Williamsonia whitbiensis. A. G. Nathorst. . . 441 557. Williamsonia sp. [Indian Geol. Survey.] .... 444 558. Williamsonia Blandfordi. [Indian Geol. Survey.] . . 446 559. Williamsonia Carruthersi 447 560. Williamsonia Bucklandi 449 561. Williamsonia scoiica 450 562-564. Williamsonia scotica. [Royal Society.] . . 451-453 565. Williamsonia spectabilis ; W. whitbiensis; W. mexicana . 459 566, 567. Wielandiella angustifolia 463, 464 568. Wielandiella angustifolia. A. G. Nathorst. . . . 466 569-573. Williamsoniella ayronata. [Royal Society.] . . 468-471 574. Cycadocephalvs Sewardi. A. G. Nathorst 474 575. Bucklandia anomala . 482 576. Bucklandia Milleriana 484 577. Bucklandia Yatesii 485 578. Bucklandia buzzardensis. [Trustees of the British Museum.] 486 579. Bucklandia indica, [Trustees of the British Museum.] . 488 580. 581. Colymbetes Edwardsi 492, 493 [Trustees of the British Museum.] 582, 583. Cycadolepis sp 495 584, 585. Carpolithus conicus 498 [Trustees of the British Museum.] 586. Beania gracilis. [W. G. Carruthers.] .... 602 587. Ptilophyllum pecten. [Trustees of the British Museum.] . 513 588. 589. Ptilophyllum pecten 514, 516 [Geological Surv. India.] 590. Ptilophyllum pecten and Williamsonia Blandfordi . . 517 [Geological Surv. India.] 591. Ptilophyllum cutchense. [Geological Society.] . . . 518 592. Ptilophyllum pecten 519 593. Ptilophyllum pecten. [Geological Society.] . . . ,519 594. Ptilophyllum pecten 520 595. Ptilophyllum pecten . . . . . . . . 523 596. Ptilophyllum pecten. [Trustees of the British Museum.] , 523 597. Ptilophyllum boreale. A. G. Nathorst. .... 526 598. Ptilophyllum antarcticum ; P. Artderssoni .... 527 599. Zamites gigas. [Encyclopaedia Britannica.] . , , 533 600. Zamites recta 534 601. Zamites Buchianus ; Z. Carruthersi ; Z. Zitteli . . . 535 602. Zamites Buchianus , 536 603. Otozamites Goeppertianvs ; O. Bechei 538 604. Otozamites Bechei 539 XVm LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FIG. PAGE 605. Otozamites Bechei 541 606. Otozamites Beani ; 0. Bunhuryanus 542 [Encyclopaedia Britannica.] 607. Otozamites bengalensis. [Geological Surv. India.] . . 542 608. Otozamites Kliptsteini. [Geological Society.] . . . 545 609. Dictyozamites Hawelli 548 610. Pterophyllum Jaegeri 549 611. Pterophyllum Nilssoni ; Nilssonia mediana .... 551 612. Pterophyllum Fayoli 552 613. Pterophyllum Braunianum 554 614. Pterophyllum Nathorsti ; Nilssonia tenuicatdis . . . 556 [Royal Society of Scotland.] 615. Pterophyllum Nilssoni 557 [Trustees of the British Museum.] 616. Pterophyllum Lyellianum 557 [Trustees of the British Museum.] 617. Pseudocycas insignis 562 618. Pseudocycas Saportae. [Encyclopaedia Britannica.] . . 564 619. Nilssonia pterophylloides ; N. brevis ; N. polymorpha . 567 620. Nilssonia brevis ; N. saighensis 570 621. Nilssonia rajmahalensis. [Geological Surv. India.] . . 571 622. Nilssonia compta. [Trustees of the British Museum.] . 574 623. Nilssonia prin,ceps. [Geological Surv. India.] . . . 577 624. 625. Ctenis sp. [Manchester Phil. Lit. Society.] . . 579 626. Ctenis sulcicaulis 583 627. Pseudoctenis eathiensis 584 [Trustees of the British Museum.] 628. Sphenozamites Rochei 588 629. Sphenozamites Belli. [Trustees of the British Museum.] . 588 CHAPTER XXVIII. CYCADALES (RECENr). Among the fossil genera described in the last chapter of the second volume some were spoken of as true Ferns though most of them, it was added, 'may safely be regarded as plants which will ultimately be shown to belong to some other group, in most cases that of the Pteridosperms.' Since this was written additional evidence has been obtained in favour of the inclusion of certain genera in the Pteridosperms. In the case of Taeniopteris, one of the genera already described, there is reason to believe that at least one species is a member of the Cycadales and not a true Fern as formerly supposed. The Pteridosperms so far described are represented for the most part by sterile leaves preserved as impressions, the genera founded on more satisfactory material having been reserved for treatment in this volume. As these genera are founded to a large extent on anatomical characters oscillating in their essential features between recent Ferns and Cycads, it is important that the student should be in possession of the anatomical character- istics of both of these classes ; and for this reason a general account of recent Cycads is intercalated between the Pteridosperms already described and those reserved for treatment in this volume. The section of the Gymnosperms known as the Cycadales, represented by nine recent genera and less than 100 species, is of exceptional importance phylogenetically and demands special attention from palaeobotanical students. Familiarity with the morphology of recent forms is essential not only in relation to extinct cycadean plants but also to types which, though not sufficiently close S. Ill 1 2 CYCADALES [CH. to surviving species to be included with them in one class, exhibit features regarded by many botanists as indications of an affinity either to true Cycads or to some generalised stock of which they are an offshoot. The Cycads of to-day may fairly be spoken of as anachronisms, plants appropriate to a former age but out of harmony with the present. They are confined to tropical and sub-tropical regions in both the old and new world. In habit Fig. 377. Cycas circinalis. From a photograph taken by Mr A. Malins Smith at Teldeniya (Ceylon). many of them resemble tree-ferns, but the columnar stem, which may live to a great age and attain a height of 20 metres, differs from that of ferns in its gradually tapered form consequent on the presence of one or more cambial cylinders. Though often unbranched (fig. 377) branching of the main trunk is by no means XXVIII STEMS Fig. 378. Cycas revoluta, as grown by Japanese horticulturalists. (After Wieland. ) Fig. 379. Encephalartos horridxbs. 1—2 4 CYCADALES [CH. unusual (fig. 378; fig. 381, B). Many Cycads are geophilous and have short tuberous stems (figs. 383, 395, 1 a ; 396, E) : the genus Zamia includes a few epiphytic forms ^. The typical cycadean stem is covered with persistent petiole-bases with or without an admixture of smaller scale-leaf bases (figs. 379, 380), while in several species a transversely wrinkled or irregularly fissured periderm forms the superficial tissue (figs. 381, B; 383). The foliage-leaves are relatively large and, with the exception of the bipinnate fronds of Bowenia (fig. 391), they are always pinnate. The fronds usually form a terminal crown (figs. 377, 379) and Fig. 380. Cycas circinalis. Stem showing alternate zones of leaf-bases (F) and scale-leaf bases ( S ). ( From the Encyclopaedia Britannica. ) as many as 100 may be produced from one bud. In Zamia pygmaea^ the fronds are only 10 — 12 cm. long, but in some cycads they reach a length of several metres. On both young foliage- leaves and scale-leaves long and very rarely branched^ unicellular hairs (fig. 396, N) form a characteristic feature and take the place of the ramental scales of the majority of ferns. The apex of the stem shown in fig. 386, A is covered with a mass of woolly hairs and several scale-leaves are seen on the lower part of the bud. All recent Cycads are dioecious. The reproductive shoots, except the megasporophylls of Cycas — which have departed to a less extent than those of other genera from the foliage-leaf plan (fig. 381, A; fig. 392, A — C) and are borne in a terminal cluster 1 Wieland (06) p. 190. 2 Botanical Magazine, Tab. 1741. 3 Matte (04) PI. xi. fig. 185 (Microcycas). XXVIIl] STROBILI through which the stem subsequently pushes its way — consist of a varying number of micro- or mega-sporophylls in dense spirals on the axis of an elongated or oval strobilus (figs. 386, B, 393, 394). The microsporophylls are occasionally verticillate^. Fig. 381. A. Cycas revoluta, megasporophylls. B. Zamia Loddigesii, branched stem. The strobili are sometimes though rarely branched^ and generally but by no means invariably^ terminal on the main stem which branches sympodially*. A striking example of 1 Thibout (96). 2 Thibout (96) PL iv. fig. 3. A branched microstrobilus of a Macrozamia is exhibited in the Botanical Department of the British Museum. 3 Pearson (06). * Solms-Laubach (90); South and Compton (08); Smith, F. G. (07). 6 CYCADALES [CH. lateral strobili has recently been described by Chamberlain^ who figures a stem of Macrozamia Moorei with fertile shoots wedged among the persistent petiole-bases, a condition very similar to that in the Mesozoic Bennettitales. Pearson has also described clear cases of laterally- borne cones in Encephalartos. Cycas exhibits two kinds of branching, the female plants being mono- podial while in the male the branching is sympodial. The micro- spores are produced in sporangia grouped in more or less well defined sori (figs. 389, A; 392, E— G). There is no definite annulus, but in the occurrence of groups of thick- walled cells some microsporangia recall those of certain ferns 2. The ovules vary considerably in size, sometimes exceeding 5 cm. in diameter : there are usually two on each megasporophyll (figs. 393, C; 394; 395, Id) but in most species of Cycas (fig. 392, B) and occasionally in other genera the number is larger^. A thick integument encloses the nucellus with which it is fused except in the apical region (fig. 396, A, B). Below the comparatively long micropylar tube is a well-developed pollen-chamber (fig. 396, B', p), a striking feature of Cycadean ovules, immediately above the megaspore; the latter is filled with prothallus-tissue and bears a small apical group of archegonia on the floor of a depression (fig. 396, A — B'). In Microcycas^ as many as 200 archegonia are recorded — a very exceptional case — and these are not confined to the apical region, though only the apical archegonia are functional. Each archegonium is characterised by a very large oval egg-cell and a much reduced neck^. The microspores usually produce a single prothallus-cell, a stalk-cell, and body-cell, and from the body-cell are developed two spirally cihated spermato- zoids (fig. 396, M). In this respect also the monotypic genus Microcycas is peculiar: it may have as many as 8 body-cells and 16 male gametes in a single pollen-tube (fig. 396, G), while in Ceratozamia^ 4 gametes have been seen in one tube. The pollen-tube grows like a fungal mycelium into the nucellar tissue and the male gametes are formed in the distended proximal end 1 Chamberlain (13). 2 L^ng (97); (00). 3 Chamberlain (09) p. 410. ^ Caldwell (07). 5 For figures and references, see Coulter and Chamberlain (10). « Chamberlain (12) p. 11. XXVin] ANATOMY 7 which on bursting liberates the motile sperms with the watery cell-sap. Fertilisation is succeeded by the development of a homogeneous proembryo partially or completely filling the zygote (fertilised egg) : by the formation of long suspensors the embryo is brought into contact with the food-store of the prothallus. In some Cycads, e.g. Encephalartos, the embryogeny exhibits a close resemblance to that of Ginkgo^. The embryo is dicotyle- donous^. The single stele of the stem is characterised by a large pith which in some genera (e.g. Encephalartos, Macrozamia) contains an anastomosing system of collateral bundles. The vascular tissue of a cycadean stem forms a cylinder of secondary xylem and phloem, the primary xylem being represented only by a few, usually crushed, protoxylem elements on the inner margin of the reticulately pitted or scalariform tracheids. Both xylem and phloem are traversed by numerous broad and deep medullary rays^. The looser texture and more parenchymatous structure of Cycadean wood afford a ready means of distinguishing it from the wood of Conifers : for the Cycadean type the term manoxylic is proposed and pycnoxylic for the more compact coniferous wood*. Eims (or 'bars') of Sanio, of which much has been said in discussions on the phylogeny of Conifers, have recently been described in the petiolar xylem of Cycas revoluta: the rims are short and 'cling closely to the borders of the pits,' features which also characterise the rims found in the cones of the Araucarineae and in the root- and cone- wood of certain Pines ^. In some Cycads the secondary xylem and phloem form a single cylinder, but in others (Cycas, Encephalartos, Macrozamia, Bowenia) the cambium is succeeded by one or several concentric cylinders of meristem which have their origin in the pericycle. The spasmodic occurrence of separate arcs of inversely orientated secondary xylem and phloem between the normal cylinders is a feature of importance from the point of view of comparison 1 Saxton (10^). 2 For an explanation of the occurrence of a single cotyledon in Ceratozamia, see Dorety (08). 3 WorsdeU (00); (01); Chamberlain (11). * fxavds, porous, loose in texture; ttvkvos, compact. 5 Sifton (15). 8 CYC AD ALES [CH. with the Palaeozoic Medulloseae^. The occurrence of concentric cauline strands in the cortex of Cycas is also a peculiarity worthy of notice. Successive bands of periderm, and occasionally a considerable amount of phelloderm^, are formed in the peripheral region of the stem. The leaf-traces in an adult stem exhibit a striking feature in their indirect or girdle-like course to the leaves (fig. 396, H, g) and in the gradual change from an endarch (fig. 396, 0) to an apparently mesarch structure (fig. 400) as they pass from the perimedullary zone to the petiole: except at the base of the petiole the vascular bundles of the frond-axis consist of (i) centri- petally developed xylem with a median protoxylem and a much smaller amount of centrifugal xylem (fig. 400) separated by a few parenchymatous elements from the centripetal xylem, (ii) an external arc of protophloem and within this metaphloem and parenchyma^. In the slender petiole of Bowenia there are a few collateral bundles arranged in the form of a circle or ellipse* ; in Cycas and some other genera the more numerous bundles form a pattern like an inverted U, and in some species of Encephalarios the number is greater and the strands more irregularly scattered^. In the vegetative stems there is no centripetal xylem in the stele, but scattered centripetal tracheids occasionally occur internal to the protoxylem in the steles of the peduncles^. Cycadeae. Megasporophylls each bearing 2 — 8 ovules, borne separately like foliage-leaves and not in strobili. Pinnae have a midrib but no lateral veins (figs. 384, 387, A). Cycas (fig. 377). Zamieae. Both kinds of sporophylls form strobili. Pinnae have several dichotomously branched, more or less parallel veins. Zamia (figs. 388 — 390), Macrozamia, Encephalartos (figs. 379, 386, C), Ceratozamia, Dioon (fig. 386, B), Microcycas. Stangerieae. Strobili as in Zamieae. Pinnae fern-like, numerous dicho- tomously branched lateral veins given off from a midrib. Stangeria. Bowenieae. Leaves bipinnate (fig. 391), strobili as in Zamieae. Bowenia. Distribution. The most widely spread genus, Cycas, occurs in Siam, India, the Nicobar Islands, Ceylon, Madagascar, and 1 Worsdell (00); (06). See postea. Chap. xxx. ^ Worsdell (982). ^ For figures, see Mettenius (60) B. ; de Bary (84) A. ; le Goc (14); Marsh (14). 4 Wieland (06) pp. 62, 63. s Matte (04) PI. vn. fig. 111. « Scott (97); Matte (04) p. 164. XXVIIl] DISTRIBUTION 9 Australia, in many of the islands in the Indian and Pacific oceans, in New Guinea, Borneo, New Caledonia, New Britain, China and Japan^. Zamia, the most northerly genus, extends from North Mexico and Florida through Central America and some of the West Indian islands to Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, and Peru. Dioon and Ceratozamia are confined to South Mexico, and Microcycas flourishes on the Cuban mountains. The continent of Africa possesses two endemic genera Encephalartos and Stangeria. Ence- phalartos extends from Cape Colony through Natal and Zululand to Zanzibar and Mombasa ^r a specimen in the Kew Herbarium (probably E. Hildehrandti) is said to have been collected as far north as the Soudan. Two species are recorded from the Congo^ and E. Barteri, discovered by Barter in Central Africa, is recorded from the Gold Coast*. Stangeria has a much more limited range in S.E. Africa^; AustraHa possesses Macrozamia, represented by several species in Western Australia, New South Wales and Queensland, Cycas in Queensland and the Northern territory and the Queensland genus Bowenia. There are no Cycads in New Zealand. As a whole Cycads have a limited range and with the exception of Cycas and Zamia none of them extend beyond the Hmits of a single continent. They are as a rule not gregarious plants and play a subordinate part in the facies of the vegetation. Macrozamia forms dense thickets® in some districts and occurs both in exposed situations and in association with Palms in damp Queensland forests. Chamberlain'^ speaks of 100 plants of Dioon edule as visible in one view in South Mexico where the species forms a mountain forest. In Florida Zamia pumila^ grows in dense moist woods, a habitat in contrast to that of many Cycads. The Mexican Ceratozamia is associated with luxuriant vegetation, while its compatriot Dioon^ lives in blazing simshine. ^ The species Cycas taiwanensis was founded by Mr Carruthers (93) on material from Formosa, and C. revoluta has also been recorded from Formosa [Thiselton- Dyer (02) p. 559], but according to Mr Elwes it is very doubtful whether any native Cycad occurs on the island. 2 Engler (95) p. 92; Stapf (14). 3 Gard. Chron. June 11, 1904, p. 370. 4 Bot. Mag. 1909, Tab. 8232. s Pearson (06). s Chamberlain (122). ' Chamberlain (06). * Webber (01). » Chamberlain (09). 10 CYCADALES [CH. Sir Joseph Hooker^ speaks of Cycas living in the deepest and hottest valleys in Sikkim. Encephalartos is essentially a xero- philous genus. Stangeria paradoxa is said to be confined to forests in Cape Colony, and another species grows among the grass of the Park-lands in open country^. While it is true that many Cycads are characteristic of dry regions some species flourish in places where shade and moisture are abundant. Though it is impossible in many cases to form an estimate of the age of individual plants, there are clear indications that some specimens afford notable instances of longevity. Chamber- l3,in estimates the age of some plants of Dioon spinulosum as exceeding 400 years and mentions an example of D. echle that is probably 1000 years old. An unusually tall plant of Encephalar- tos in the Botanic Garden of Amsterdam is believed by Prof, de Vries to have reached the venerable age of 2000 years ^. The restricted range and in many cases the solitary existence of recent Cycads, with their tall stems clothed with the persistent cork- covered stumps of thousands of fronds, deepens the impression of antiquity derived from a study of the geological history of this dwindling race. Stems. The tall columnar stems of some species of Cycas, often branched or bearing numerous ovoid buds like enlarged bulbils^, are characterised by the regular alternation of large and small leaf-bases as seen in the stem of C. circinalis reproduced in fig. 380. In older stems of this species the leaf-bases are exfoliated and the stem is covered with wrinkled and fissured cork ; but in Cycas revoluta the leaf-bases are even more persistent. The columnar but relatively stout stems of Encephalartos (figs. 379, 382, 386, A) and Ceratozamia are similarly encased in a covering of petiole-bases, but in these genera the difierences between foliage-leaves and bud-scales is much less obvious and there is no zonal alternation. On the stems of Macrozamia the rhomboidal leaf-bases are more uniform in size and there are no scale-leaves. The tall and often palm-like stems of Microcycas ' Hooker, J. D. (91) A. p. 98 (footnote). 2 Pearson (06). ^ Prof, de Vries kindly informed me in a letter that this estimate is not to be regarded as anything more than a rough guess. 4 Stopes (10). xxvni] STEMS 11 sometimes show transverse rings on the bark marking the position of former terminal buds, and in older trunks these may disappear, leaving a fissured bark^. In Cycas siamensis the tuberous stem Fig. 382. Encephalartos Ghellinckii. dV nat. size.) is similarly covered with a rough bark (fig. 383) and the stems of Zamia are also characterised by an absence of persistent leaf- bases (figs. 381, B; 395, la, a). It is pertinent to remind the 1 CaldweU (07). 12 CYC AD ALES [CH. palaeobotanical student of the occurrence of flowering plants with stems closely simulating those of some Cycads. Prof. Bower^ in describing Rhynchopetakim montanum, an Abyssinian Lobelia- ceous plant, drew attention to the similarity in surface-features and to some extent in anatomical structure to cycadean stems. The resemblances are further emphasised in a more recently published account of the same species under a different name, Lobelia Rhynchopetalum^. Fig. 383. Cycas siamensis. (From the Encyclopaedia Britannica.) Fronds, A general acquaintance with the various types of fronds illustrated by recent Cycads is important to the student of fossils not only to enable him to compare existing and extinct forms but as affording safeguards against possible sources of error in the description and identification of impressions^. The verna- tion exhibits less uniformity than in Ferns: in Cycas the rachis is straight and the pinnae circinately coiled (fig. 220, B, vol. ii. p. 283) ; in Zamia and Stangeria the rachis is bent and the pinnae straight, while in Ceratozamia and other genera both the axis and leaflets are straight. As Braun pointed out, there is as a rule no terminal leaflet, or it may be pushed to one side giving a forked appearance to the frond apex*. 1 Bower (84). 2 Rosen (11). 3 Seward (95) A. pp. 15 et seq. * Braun, A. (75). V XXVIIl] FRONDS 13 Cycas. The presence of a strong midrib and the absence of lateral veins are distinguishing features: the lower margin of the lamina is frequently decurrent (fig. 387, A). In C. circinalis the pinnae may reach 40 cm. in length with a fairly uniform breadth of 2 cm. A frond of this species in the British Museum, not quite complete, has a length of 112 cm. : on the lower part of the rachis strong spines replace the leaflets and near the apex of the leaf concrescent pinnae form a continuous lamina traversed by seven ribs and dissected at the margin into acuminate teeth (fig. 384): some of the pinnae Fig. 384. Cycas circinalis, abnormal frond. (From a specimen in the British Museum. ) are forked as in Cycas Micholitzii^ (fig. 385). Several years ago I noticed a similar instance of concrescence in a small plant of C. circinalis in the Royal Gardens, Kew (fig. 387, I). In Cycas Micholitzii the pinnae, reaching a length of 20 cm., are repeatedly and deeply forked (fig. 385, A, B; fig. 400): the pinnae of C. Rumphii var. bifida^ are also deeply dissected. Cycas Beddomei has very narrow pinnae (15 cm. x 2 mm.) similar to those of the Wealden 1 Thiselton-Dyer {65) B.; Bot. Mag. 1909, Tab. 8242. 2 Thiselton-Dyer (02) p. 560. 14 CYCADALES [CH. species Cycadites Saportae, and it is noteworthy that narrow leaflets with a strongly revolute lamina would produce casts with two parallel ribs (the grooves between the midrib and the edge of the lamina) simulating the double midrib of the fossil genus Pseudocycas. In some fronds, e.g. C. Cairnsiana, the midrib is hardly visible on the upper face of a dried pinna which shows a longitudinal wrinkling simulating parallel venation. Fig. 385. A, B, Gycas Micholit^ii. (After Thiselton-Dyer. ) C, Zamia angustifolia. Encephalartos. The fronds of this genus, in Encephalartos Laurentianus^ reaching the exceptional length of 7 metres, bear alternate pinnae exhibiting a considerable range in form and breadth. In E. longifolius, E. AUensteinii (fig. 386, C), E. Lehmanni, etc., the pinnae are for the most part linear, reaching a length of 20 cm. and a breadth of 2 cm. : in E. caffer (fig. 387, D), E. latifolius, and others the pinnae are broader and shorter and often spinous. A frond of E. longifolius or E. AUensteinii may bear both entire and lobed, spinous pinnae. In E. Frederici-Guilielmi (fig. 387, G) and E. GheUinckii^ (fig. 382) the pinnae are very narrow and almost filiform, with revolute edges. The thick and leathery pinnae of some species are attached obliquely to the edge or 1 Gard. Chron. 1904, June 11, p. 370. Seward (97). XXVIIl] FRONDS 15 Fig. 386. A. Encephalartos Altensteinii, apex of stem. B. Dioon edule, megastrobilus. (From a photograph by Mr S. M. Wadham. ) C. Encephalartos Altensteinii, frond. 16 CYCADALES [CH. to the upper sloping sides of the rachis which forms a prominent ridge between the rows of leaflets, and characteristic oval scars are left on the fall of the pinnae (fig. 387, D, G'). The lamina in most species contains several veins more or less parallel to the margins and often much more prominent on the lower than on the upper surface. -41)1^- Fig. 387, Cycadean fronds. A, Cycas circinalis; B, Macrozamia Fraseri; C, Macrozamia Denisoni; D, Encephalartos caffer; E, F, Dioon edule from below and above; G, Encephalartos Frederici-Guilielmi, G', side-view; H, Ceratozamia mexicana; I, Cycas circinalis, lower part of young frond. Zamia. In Zamia angustifolia (fig. 385, C) and Z. linifolia the pinnae are long and very narrow: the other extreme is represented by Z. WaUisii'^ (fig. 388) with broad ovate segments reaching a length of nearly -5 metre and attached to the rachis by a short stalk; the veins are prominent and dichotomously branched. Other forms of pinnae are represented by Z. integrijolia, Z, floridana, and Z. Loddigesii (figs. 389, 390, 395). The 1 Braun, A. (75^) p. 376. XXVIIl] FRONDS 17 Fig. 388. Pinna of Zamia WalUsii. From a drawing after A. Braun in the Kew Herbarium. {I nat. size.) S.III ^' ^ 2 18 CYCADALES [CH. Fig. 389. Zamia integrifolia bearing a megastrobilus and showing foliage -leaves and scale-leaves. A, microsporophyll ; B, megasporophyll. (After Rendle, from Jacquin.) Fig. 390. Small frond of Zamia Loddigesii. (f nat. size.) XXVIIlJ FRONDS 19 broad and short pinnae of Z. furfuracea^ bear a close resemblance, except in the absence of an auriculate base, to those of some species of the fossil genus Otozamites. The broadly linear pinnae of Z. p^ewcZopamsi^ica (45 cm. x 3 cm.) often show longitudinal wrinklings on drying which suggest comparison with the corrugated lamina of the fossil species Nilssonia brevis. A basal pad or callosity on the slender bases of the pinnae is characteristic of many Zamia fronds. Ceratozamia. The fronds bear a fairly close resemblance to those of Macrozamia: in Ceratozamia mexicana the hnear pinnae reach a length of over 30 cm. and a breadth of 2 — 3 cm. ; the lamina tapers to a narrow apex and is more abruptly contracted at the base (fig. 387, H). The veins in Ceratozamia are sub-parallel and dichotomy occurs up to the middle of the lamina 2. A striking feature is the occurrence of two opposite stipule-like projections a short distance above the base of the petiole. Macrozamia. A noteworthy feature in some species is the attachment of the linear pinnae along the middle line of the rachis (fig. 387, C) ; in others (fig. 387, B) the leaflets are attached laterally and may have a basal callosity. The parallel veins, which branch dichotomously near the base of the lamina, are often much more prominent on the lower than on the upper face. In M. heteromera^ (fig. 396, F, F') the narrow pinnae are deeply forked and strongly revolute. The spirally twisted rachis of M. spiralis, M. heteromera, etc., is a striking feature recalHng the Rhaetic fern Camptopteris spiralis Nath*. Dioon. The arrangement of the linear pinnae of D. edule (fig. 386, B), D. spinulosum, and D. Purpusii^ forms a ready means of distinguishing the fronds of this genus: the pinnae, often contiguous and at right-angles to the rachis, are attached in a lateral groove by an expanded and slightly decurrent base. The difference between the lower and upper face of a frond (fig. 387, E, F) affords a good illustration of a common source of error in the identification of fossil specimens. The leaflets of D. spinulosum, which except in their spinous margin are very similar to those of D. edule, may reach a length of 15 cm. and a breadth of 8 mm. The parallel veins are unbranched^. Microcycas"^. The pinnae of this genus, very like those of the Wealden species Zamites Buchianus, reach a length of 20 cm. and a breadth of 8 mm. : on falling they leave oblong scars resembling those on the rachis of Encepha- lartos. Stangeria. This genus is particularly interesting because of its fern-like habit and venation. The large fronds of 8. paradoxal bear broadly linear 1 Bot Mag. 1818, Tab. 1969. ^ Matte (04) p. 34. 3 Seward (95) A. p. 5; Robertson (02) fig. 4. * Vol. II. fig. 287, p. 389. ^ Chamberlain (09). 6 Braun, A. (75); Bornemann (56) A. PL x. ' Caldwell (07); Caldwell and Baker (07). « Bot. Mag. 1859, Tab. 5121. 2—2 20 CYCADALES [CH. acuminate pinnae with entire, unevenly lobed, serrate, or pinnatifid margins. Some leaflets are so deeply dissected as almost to justify the appellation pinnate. Both entire and dissected leaflets may occur on one frond and the lower ones may be stalked while the upper pinnae are sessile. The venation agrees closely with that of the genus Taeniopteris^. Bowenia. The large fronds of this genus (fig. 391) are peculiar in being bipinnate ; they may reach a length of 2 metres and have a long slender petiole: the asymmetrical lamina of the segments, entire or deeply serrate, is attached by a very short stalk; the veins branch dichotomously^ and Fig. 391. Bowenia spectabilis, frond. (From the Encyclopaedia Britannica.) diverge slightly. Both entire and serrate pinnae may occur on the same plant, but Chamberlain has revived Andre's specific term serrulata in preference to the generally adopted designation for the serrate forms, B. spectabilis var. serrata^. Reproductive shoots^. In Cycas circinalis, C. Rumphii, and other species the megasporophylls reach a considerable length and bear several lateral ovules each of which may be as large as a 1 Vol. II. p. 485. 3 Chamberlain (123). 2 Lignier (94). * For information on the anatomy of reproductive shoots, see Thibout (96). Scott (97); Worsdell (98); Matte (04). XXVIIl] REPRODUCTIVE SHOOTS 21 Fig. 392. A. Cycas pectinata, apex of megasporophyll. (f nat. size.) B, C. Cycas Riuminiana, megasporophyll. (| nat. size.) D. Encephalartos Altensteinii. Distal end of megasporophylls. (From the Gardeners' Chronicle.) E, F. Cycas angulata, microsporophyll and sorus. G, I. Ceratozamia mexicana, I, microsporophyll with scars of son («) ; G, sorus. (After Thibout.) H. Stangeria paradoxa, megastrobilus. 22 CYCADALES CH, goose's egg: the sterile distal end has the form of a spear-point with an irregularly serrate edge. In C. revoluta, C. pectinata, etc., the sterile part is deeply dissected and may break off (fig. 392, A) from the fertile portion of the sporophyll. The megasporophylls ti *^^- ^F'C ^r ^^^ ^ ^S- _^ ,j,. . J V Fig. 393. A. Stangeria paradoxa, part of microstrobilus. B, D. Encephalartos villosus, megastrobilus in surface-view and in section. {^ nat. size.) C. Ceratozamia mexicana, single megasporophyll. of C. Riuminiana exhibit a striking variation in form (fig. 392, B, C) ; some are 15 cm. long with several ovules, while others, reduced to 8 cm., bear only two ovules and resemble the sporo- phylls of Dioon. In all other genera the megasporophylls are XXVIIl] REPRODUCTIVE SHOOTS 23 aggregated into cones, but in Dioon the strobili are characterised by their more ovoid form and by the looser arrangement of the sporophylls (fig. 386, B), each of which consists of a horizontal stalk expanded distally into a broadly lanceolate upturned end covered with a thick felt of hairs and bearing at its base usually 2, rarely 5 — 6, ovules on cushion-like swellings. In Dioon spinu- losum the cones may be 50 cm. long. Between the cones of Microcycas, over 90 cm. long, and those of some Zamias, a few centimetres long, there are many intermediate forms. The Fig. 394. Macrozamia Preissii, megastrobilus and (A) single megasporophyll; a, axis of cone ; p, stalk of megasporophyll; 5, unripe seeds. (After Rendle.) large strobilus of an Encephalartos reproduced in fig. 393, D, shows the convex ends of the sporophylls with a jagged edge, and in monstrous cones the marginal lobes may be abnormally developed and assume the appearance of pinnae^. Each mega- sporophyll bears two large ovules (fig. 393, B). In certain species of Encephalartos the swollen ends of the sporophylls have a trun- cate centre like the flattened umbo of some Pines (fig. 392, D). The presence of two divergent spines is a peculiarity of the mega- 1 Thiselton-Dyer (01); BoL Mag. 1915, Tab. 8592, 8593. For instances of monstrous cones, see Miquel (69), Wieland (02). 24 CYCADALES [CH. sporophylls of Ceratozamia (fig. 393, C) : in Macrozamia (fig. 394) the distal ends are prolonged as tapered processes. The surface of the strobilus of Stangeria is formed by imbricate and rounded Fig. 395. Zamia floridana. I a, complete plant ; a, main trunk ; b, branch-scar ; c, secondary root ; rf, primary tap-root. (|^ nat. size.) I 6, I c, megastrobilus. (l nat. size.) Id, megasporophyll. (|nat. size.) I e, pinna, (f nat. size. After Wieland.) ends of sporophylls (fig. 392, H) not unlike the cone-scales of Finns excelsa or P. cembra. The megasporophylls of Zamia are expanded into regular cushion-like hexagons with a flat central ^rea (figs. 389, B; 395, 16). The microsporophylls (figs. 389, A; 392, E) are in all genera XXVIIl] SEEDS 25 aggregated into strobili which often bear a close resemblance to seed-cones (fig. 393, A). On a single sporophyll of Cycas circinalis there may be as many as 700 sporangia while in Zamia floridana there are only two microsporangia. The spore-output is large and in extreme cases, e.g. in Dioon spinulosum, the average number of spores in a sporangium is said to be 30,000^. Seeds. In the great majority of recent species the seeds may be described as large and afford a striking contrast to the small seeds of the Mesozoic Bennetti tales. A feature of interest from the point of view of comparison with Palaeozoic seeds is the absence of a resting stage, germination in some cases following seed-fall without an interval. As Warming pointed out, the embryo is often undeveloped w^hen the seeds are shed. An interesting fact is recorded by Capt. Dorrien-Smith^ with regard to seed-dispersal: he describes the heavy pebble-like seeds of a Macrozamia as being hurled from the ripe cones a distance of 12 ft. The seeds of Cycas are platyspermic ; the woody shell exposed on removal of the outer flesh is slightly flattened and has two prominent angles, but three-angled seeds may occur as in Ginkgo biloha (fig. 631, C). In other genera the seeds are radiospermic. The seed of Encephalartos Altensteinii^ (fig. 396, D) has a square- cut distal end with a small papilla at the summit of the unusually long micropylar canal (17 mm.). The stone of this seed (fig. 396, C) shows parallel curved ridges which mark the position of vascular strands in the inner region of the outer flesh. The large ovules of Cycas circinalis^ have an integument 1 cm. thick consisting of an outer and inner flesh and an intervening stony layer which reaches its greatest development at the base and apex. Three vascular strands enter the base of the seed, the concentric strand breaks up in the broad inner flesh into a group of bundles which embrace but do not penetrate the lower end of the nucellus. Each of the two lateral strands branches in the outer flesh near its entrance into the seed; the outer and larger collateral and mesarch bundle passes up close to the surface of the shell to the seed-apex, while the inner branch penetrates the shell and, occasionally branching, passes up the inner region of the inner 1 Chamberlain (09). 2 Dorrien-Smith (11) p. 287. 3 Slopes (04) p. 467. « Slopes (04) p. 438, fig. 1 ; Warming (77) PI. iii. 26 CrCADALES [CH. XXVIIl] SEEDS "27 flesh as far as the micropyle. In other seeds the tracheal supply of the outer flesh consists of several bundles and not two as in Cycas. The inner flesh abuts on the nucellus and is connected with it except at the apex (fig. 396, B). In ripe seeds the nucellus is reduced to a thin membrane enclosing the large megaspore at the upper end of which is a depression (fig. 396, B') or sometimes two depressions (fig. 396, I) in the prothallus containing the archegonia. In the seed of Dioon edule^ (fig. 396, A) the position of the absciss-layer (.9) is indicated by a slight transverse con- striction. In the seeds of Bowenia, constructed on the same plan, the inner series of vascular strands appears to be nucellar in position, thus differing from the strands in Dioon, Cycas, and other genera which are confined to the integument. Miss Kershaw ^ in describing Bowenia speaks of an upper and a lower pollen- chamber ; the former serves as a storage-place for the microspores 1 Chamberlain (06). 2 Kershaw (12). Fig. 396. A. Seed of Dioon edule in longitudinal section; a, integument; V, vascular tissue ; m, prothallus ; n, nucellus ; p, pollen-chamber ; 8, absciss -layer; ar, archegonia. (After Chamberlain.) B, B'. Seed of Cycas circinalis; a, v, integument (sarcotesta) and vascular tissue; 6, sclerotesta; c, inner sarcotesta; m, n, pro- thallus and nucellus. (After Stopes.) B'. Apex of nucellus ; p, pollen-chamber ; i, integument ; n, nucellus ; ch, archegonial chamber; ar, archegonia. C, D. Seed oi Encephalartos AUensteinii ; C, surface of stone. (After Stopes. ) E. Stem of Bowenia serrulata; g, level of ground. (After Chamber- lain. ) F. F'. Pinnae of Macrozamia heteromera. G. Pollen-tube of Microcycas Calocoma. (After Caldwell.) H. Transverse section of stem of Encephalartos horridus; s, stele; g, girdle-bundles. (After Mettenius.) I. Apical view of prothallus of Cycas showing two archegonial chambers (ch). (After Treub.) K. Encephalartos Barteri, Transverse section of stem; x, xylem; p, phloem. (After Matte.) L. Cycas siamensis. Transverse section of vascular tissue of young stem. (After Matte.) M. Cycas revoluta; two motile sperms. (After Miyake.) N. Long hair with short basal cell from the petiole of Macrozamia heteromera. (After Robertson.) 0. Vascular bundle of Dioon edule from base of petiole; p, phloem; c, cambium. (After Mettenius.) 28 CYC AD ALES [CH. prior to their further development in the lower chamber. Dr Stopes^ regards the integument as double in origin, a view suggested by Griffith ^ in 1835, and as homologous with the single integument plus the cupule of Lagenostoma. This view is supported by Mrs Thoday^ : on the other hand Miss Kershaw's investigation of Bowenia seeds leads her to regard the integument as single. Although there would seem to be a -prima facie case in favour of the dual nature of the integument, the arguments on the other side have greater weight*. Kecent observations point to the probability that insects play a part in the pollination of cycadean ovules. Kraus^ drew attention to the strong smell emitted by the microstrobili of Dioon edule and noticed that small bees were attracted to the ripe strobili of Macrozamia, while odourless cones of a neighbouring Ceratozamia received no attention. Pearson^ and Rattray"^ have obtained evidence that beetles and weevils act as pollinators to species of Encephalartos. Anatomical features. Allusion has already been made to some of the more striking anatomical features ; the large pith, the occasional occurrence of medullary vascular bundles, the presence of one or more cambiums, the large size of the medullary rays, etc. It is worthy of remark that the occurrence of an anastomosing system of medullary bundles is not a constant feature within a genus; in Macrozamia Fraseri such a system is present, but absent in M. Denisoni^. In the pith of stems with no medullary bundles cylinders of collateral bundles may occur in connexion with a fertile shoot. These bundles arise from the inner face of the main cylinder and pass upwards as a domical system into the base of the terminal strobilus which is eventually pushed to one side by the growth of a lateral bud^. The secondary xylem tracheids are usually provided with several rows of bordered pits on the radial walls and resemble those of the Araucarieae^^, but in Cycads the pits are often not contiguous and less compact 1 Stopes (04). 2 Oliver (13). 3 Thoday (Sykes) (11); Sykes (10); Thoday (Sykes) and Berridge (12). * Salisbury (14) p. 72. « Kraus (96). 6 Pearson (06). ' Rattray (13). 8 Worsdell (96); (01). » See ante, p. 5. i» Chamberlain (11); Wieland (06). xxvni] ANATOMICAL FEATURES 29 in their distribution. The wood of Stangeria is peculiar in con- sisting of scalariform tracheids^ (fig. 397). Chamberlain describes growth-rings in the wood of Dioon ; but this is exceptional. In tangential sections of the stele leaf-trace bundles are constantly seen passing horizontally through the broad and deep medullary rays. The pith-cast of a cycadean stem reproduced in fig. 398 shows the wide meshes in the reticulum of tracheal tissue originally occupied by parenchyma, which on decay left lenticular depressions Fig. 397. Tracheids from the stem of Stangeria paradoxa. (After Marsh. ) Fig. 398. Pith-cast of a Macrozamia stem, (f nat. size.) represented on the cast by tapered convex areas occasionally bearing the impress of an outgoing trace in the form of a narrow groove. The secondary phloem often rivals the xylem in breadth and is not always easily distinguishable from it; it consists of sieve-tubes, parenchyma, and fibres. The secondary cambial cylinders characteristic of Cycas, Encephalartos, Macrozamia, and Bowenia, to which reference was made in the summary of anatomical features, arise in the pericycle, and a few layers of Pavolini (09); Marsh (14). 30 CYCADALES [CH. pericyclic parenchyma occur between adjacent extrafascicular cylinders of xylem and phloem. In a stem of Cycas media 35 cm. in diameter examined by Worsdell there were 12 concentric cylinders. Matte^ and Miss Dorety^ have described partially flattened arcs of extrafascicular xylem and phloem in the hypo- cotyl of Ceratozamia mexicana. WorsdelP first drew attention to the occasional occurrence of short tracheids on the inner edge of the secondary wood and to the spasmodic development of cambial arcs in the tissue between the extrafascicular cylinders forming strands of inversely orientated xylem and phloem. More recent work by Matte gives support to Worsdell's comparison between Medullosean stems and those of recent Cycads with inversely orientated arcs or concentric vascular cylinders. The French author draws attention to the close resemblance between the seedling stems of such species as Encephalartos Barteri (fig. 396, K) and Cycas siamensis (fig. 396, L) with their polystelic type of structure and the adult stems of Medullosa^. In the stems of Dioon, Microcycas, Stangeria, and Zamia no extrafasci- cular cylinders are recorded. Two main vascular bundles enter the cortex from each leaf-base and in most stems these diverge right and left and more or less completely encircle the stele before passing through the medullary rays and joining the inner portion of the xylem of the stele either as double or single bundles. These girdle-bundles (fig. 396, H) first described by Karsten and Mettenius form a very characteristic cycadean feature^. Adjacent girdles are joined by connecting cortical bundles and, in addition, there are cauline collateral bundles in the cortex which form an anastomosing system. In some cases, e.g. species of Macrozamia and occasionally in Stangeria, the female peduncle of a Cerato- zamia, and in seedlings of Bowenia and Cycas revoluta^, the leaf- traces pursue a direct course from petiole to stele as in stems of Bennetti tales. It is noteworthy that in seedlings of Microcycas'', a genus characterised by a large number of male gametes — presumably a primitive feature — the leaf-traces are of the girdle- type. The two bundles at the base of a petiole by repeated 1 Matte (08). ^ Dorety (OS^); (09). » Worsdell (96). 4 Matte (04) especially pp. 185—202. See also Worsdell (00); (06) etc. 6 Matte (04) p. 210. « Worsdell (98^). ' Caldwell (07). XXVIII ANATOMICAL FEATURES 31 subdivision give rise to the numerous collateral strands of the rachis. A leaf-trace in its passage to the leaf is like that of a Conifer in having the protoxylem on its inner edge, whereas in the petiole and elsewhere in the frond it is characterised by an arrangement of the xylem that has usually been described as mesarch. A typical vascular bundle from a cycadean frond is seen in fig. 399, C ; by far the greater part of the xylem is centripetal, the centrifugal xylem being confined to an arc of scattered tracheids or a small strand separated by a few parenchymatous cells from the protoxylem. Fig. 399. Sketches illustrating the changes in the structure of Cycadean vascular bundles in their course from stem to leaf : cp, cf, centripetal and centrifugal xylem; p, phloem; px, protoxylem. (After Marsh.) As considerable stress has been laid on the anatomical features of the cycadean foliar bundles in discussions on the affinities and phylogeny of certain Palaeozoic genera, it is important to consider the facts more closely i. French anatomists described the cycadean bundle as diploxylic on the ground that the centripetal and centrifugal xylenis are distinctly different things, the centripetal xylem being primary — a rehc of a former organisation — and the centrifugal xylem secondary and homologous with the normal 1 Carano (04); le Goc (14); Marsh (14). 32 CYCADALES [CH. wood of the cauline bundle. The term mesarch has in recent years been applied to the cycadean type of bundle. A mesarch bundle is, however, one in which centripetal and centrifugal xylem are alike in origin, both being primary structures derived from a desmogen strand. Typical mesarch bundles occur in several recent ferns ; in the stele of the Osmundaceae, Gleichenia, and other genera ; but in these plants the xylem is all produced directly from one primary desmogen region and there is no question of 'primary' and 'secondary' as in the two portions of the xylem of a cycadean bundle. Recent researches into the development of cycadean foliar bundles show that they do not conform to the mesarch type as generally understood. A leaf- trace at the base of a petiole (fig. 399, A) comprises centrifugal xylem only, and this consists of regular rows of tracheids separated by medullary rays ; in the lower part of the petiole the structure is gradually modified, the centrifugal xylem is reduced and the formation of centripetal xylem is initiated. At a higher level (fig. 399, B) the centripetal xylem is in excess of the centrifugal and the latter, for a time connected with the former, eventually becomes separated by a few parenchymatous cells from the protoxylem and persists as a small strand or arc of tracheids. Fig. 399 illustrates stages in the transformation of a typical collateral bundle, at the base of a Stangeria petiole, into one in which the xylem is almost wholly centripetal at a higher level in the axis of the frond. A cambium is present in all : in B the centrifugal xylem is more or less clearly differentiated into two portions, loosely arranged tracheids near the phloem, and the more compact groups abutting on the centripetal xylem : figs. C — E show a further reduction in the centrifugal tracheids. The conclusion drawn from developmental study is that the two xylem portions of the bundle are independent in origin^. Marsh has, however, shown that in Stangeria bundles near the base of the petiole the centrifugal xylem consists of rows of secondary tracheids and an inner portion not in rows which connects the centrifugal with the centripetal elements ; this connecting portion, he adds, is 'probably primary and connects up the Cycadean foliar bundle with the truly mesarch bundle of the Cycadofilices.' 1 Le Goc (14); Marsh (14). XXVIIl] ANATOMICAL FEATURES 33 In the xylem portion of the bundle from the midrib of a forked pinna of Cycas Micholitzii shown in fig. 400 the centrifugal xylem elements are unusually numerous: the space between the two xylems is occupied by parenchyma and the whole strand is enclosed by a sheath of crystal-containing cells, s, with thick inner walls. Fig. 400, 1 — 4, illustrates the gradual change in the form of the bundle in the region of dichotomy^. The ground-tissue of the .A'-PX Fig. 400. Cycas Micholitzii. Vascular bundles in a forked] pinna ; px, proto- xylem ; s, sheath of thick-walled cells ; cf, cp, centrifugal and centripetal xylem. petiole is abundantly supplied with secretory canals and in the hypodermal region is a cylinder of stereome. In some petioles, e.g. Macrozamia heteromera^, the ground-tissue cells are lignified and reticulately pitted, a feature met with in some Mesozoic cycadean leaves^. In Cycas media Worsdell noticed a tendency 1 Seward (06). 2 Robertson (02). a geward (122). 34 CYCADALES [CH. XXVIII of the leaf-trace bundles towards a concentric arrangement and similar vascular strands are recorded in the peduncle of Dioon edule, in various sporophylls^ and in other cases. It is possible, as Worsdell believes, that the fairly frequent occurrence of con- centric bundles in plants characterised by collateral bundles may have a phylogenetic significance. The pinnae are dorsi ventral and the veins exarch or pseudo- mesarch : secretory canals occur between (Encephalartos), above, or below the veins. The mesophyll of Cycas is characterised by the presence of isolated xylem-elements passing from the midrib to the edge of the lamina and, as Lignier^ suggests, these may be regarded as a reduced system of lateral conducting strands. The epidermal cells of the leaflets have straight or slightly curved walls except in Stangeria where they are undulate and fern- like^. The stomata, with few exceptions confined to the lower epidermis, are larger than in other gymnosperms (on the average •075 X -034 mm.) and are more or less depressed below the surface ; the guard-cells are usually surrounded by 4 — 6 subsidiary cells. The roots exhibit no feature to which attention need be called : the pericycle is several cells broad and as in the stem there may be extrafascicular cylinders of xylem and phloem. 1 WorsdeU (98). 2 Lignier (92). 5 Nestler (95); Porsoh (05); Thomas and Bancroft (13); Dusanek (13). CHAPTER XXIX. PTERIDOSPERMEAE. I. LYGINOPTERIDEAE. LYGINOPTERIS. The genus Lyginopteris is selected for the first place in this chapter simply on the ground that we have a fuller knowledge of its morphology than in the case of other types. It is not regarded as the most primitive member of its class. Lyginopteris may be described in a few words as a plant having the habit and to a large extent the anatomical features of a Fern, but differing from existing ferns in the possession of integumented megasporangia or seeds and in the power of secondary growth in thickness by means of a cambium in both stem and root. The seed (Lagenostoma) agrees with those of recent Cycads and Gnetales more closely than with the corresponding organs in Conifers or any other group, while the structure of the secondary wood is practically identical with that of Cycads. The microsporangia occur as groups of small bilocular sporangia, or synangia, at the tips of fertile pinnae of highly compound fronds. Nomenclature and Historical Summary. In 1866 E. W. Binney^ of Manchester published a short description of a small petrified stem from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire and named it Dadoxylon oldhamiiim, employing EndHcher's term Dadoxylon which that author substituted for Pinites as previously used by Witham^. Three years later Wilhamson^ drew attention to certain features in which Binney's type differs from the genus Dadoxylon and substituted a new name Dictyoxylon, suggested by the reticulate pitting on the walls of the tracheids. In a 1 Binney (66). ^ Unger (50) A. p. 378. 3 WiUiamson (69). 3—2 36 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. subsequent paper Williamson^ gave a fuller description of Binney's species and spoke of it as ' one of the most common plants in the calcareous nodules of the Lower Coal Measures' of Lancashire and Yorkshire. He connected certain casts of arborescent dimensions with Binney's type on the ground that the surface- features of the casts are such as would be produced by partially decorticated stems having a hypodermal reticulum of mechanical tissue hke that preserved in the small petrified specimen described by Binney (fig. 402). Mr Carruthers called Wilhamson's attention to a paper by Mr Gourhe^ in which the generic name Lyginodendron is instituted for stem-casts identical in surface-features with the fossils figured by Williamson. In spite of the much larger dimen- sions of the reticulum on the casts described by Gourlie as compared with that in the outer cortex of Binney's stem, WilHamson con- cluded that Lyginodendron is 'undoubtedly an inorganic cast of the prosenchymatous layer of the bark of Dictyoxylon.' It is but fair to add that WilHamson was influenced in coming to this conclusion by a discovery by Mr Nield of a piece of a large petrified stem believed to be generically identical with Binney's type, but subsequently referred to a distinct genus ^, which was com- parable in size with the stems responsible for Gourlie's Lygino- dendron casts. The type-specimen of GourHe's Lyginodendron Landsburgii^, from Carboniferous rocks at Stevenston in Ayrshire, Scotland, is represented in fig. 401. The convex areas represent casts of depressions in a reticulum of cortical tissue, originally occupied by comparatively delicate cells, which decayed or shrunk more quickly than the enclosing framework of stronger fibrous elements that remained as a prominent reticulum and produced the depressions bounding the raised portions of the cast. Such a cast would undoubtedly be formed by the stem on which Binney founded his species: the radially disposed bands of thick-walled cells seen in the outer part of the section (fig. 402) are portions of an irregular anastomosing mechanical system, the reticulate arrangement of which is seen in the impression of a rachis of a Lyginopteris frond shown in fig. 405, E, and indicated in the more slender axis reproduced in fig. 404, A, b. This reticulate form of 1 WilHamson (73) A. ^ QourHe (44). » See page 186. * Solms-Laubaeh (91) A. pp. 8, 217, 218. xxix] LYGINOPTERTDEAE 37 cortical stereome on which Brongniart founded the genus Bicty- oxylon^, a term since applied by Solms-Laubach and other authors to a certain type of cortex not confined to a single genus of plants, occurs also in some Palaeozoic lycopodiaceous sterns^ and in itself r Fig. 401. Lyginodendron Landsburgii. (Kidston Coll. f nat. size.) cannot be regarded as a safe criterion of botanical affinity. The largest example of Gourlie's Lyginodendron that has come under my notice is an incomplete sandstone cast from Upper Carboni- ferous strata near Harrogate reaching a length of 100 cm. and 1 Solms-Laubach (91) A. pp. 8, 217, 218. 2 VoL ii. p. 220. 38 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. with convex areas 13 cm. long. A similar cast, 36 cm. broad, has recently been figured by Nathorst^ from the Culm of Spitz- bergen, and from the Upper Devonian of Ellesmere Land the same author has described impressions of a cortical reticulum under the name Lyginodendron Sverdriipi^. These specimens are interesting as pointing to the former occurrence in the Arctic regions of stems — probably Lepidodendroid— reaching the dimen- sions of a fairly large tree. As Potonie^ pointed out, Gourlie's generic name serves a useful purpose for casts of stems of the type shown in fig. 401 that cannot be assigned to a definite systematic position. The genus was first used for a specimen which has nothing to do with the plant usually spoken of as Lyginodendron oldhamium (Binney). Though loath to give up a name by which Binney's type has long been known, in spite of its retention in the second volume of this work I feel compelled so far to conform to the recognised principles governing nomen- clature as to adopt Potonie's generic term Lyginopteris. Lyginopteris oldhamia (Binney). i. Stem. 1866. Dadoxylon oldhamium^ Binney, Proc. Lit. Phil. Manchester, vol. v. p. 113. 1869. Dictyoxylon oldhamium^ Williamson, Monthly Micros. Journ. vol. ii. p. 66. 1873. Lyginodendron oldhamium, Williamson, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. vol. CLxm. p. 404. 1899. Lyginopteris oldhamia, Potoni6, Lehrbuch der Pflanzenpalaeontologie, p. 171. ii. Leaf. 1828. Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi, Brongniart, Prodrome, p. 51. 1872. Edraxylon, Williamson, Proc, R. Soc. vol. xx. p. 438. 1874. Rachiopteris aspera, Williamson, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. vol. clxiv. p. 684. 1877. Calymmatotheca Hoeninghausi, Stur, Culm Flora, ii. p. 266. 1905. Crossotheca Hoeninghausi, Kidston, Proc. R. Soc. vol. lxxvi. p. 358. iii. Seed. 1877. Lagenostoma, Williamson, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. vol. clxvii. p. 234. 1903. Lagenostoma Lomaxi, OHver and Scott, Proc. R. Soc. vol. lxxi. p. 477. iv. Root. 1876. Kaloxylon HooJceri, WilHamson, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. vol. clxvi. p. 23. 1 Nathorst (14) PI. vii. fig. 1. ^ Nathorst (04) B. p. 11. ^ Potonie (99) B. p. 171. xxix] LYGINOPTERIDEAE 39 Stem. The petrified stem on which Binney founded the species was first figured by Dr Arber^ from a section in the Binney collection in the Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge: this section (13mm. in diameter) is reproduced in fig. 402. The most striking features are: (i) the pith consisting of an unusually large and irregular group of dark thick-walled parenchyma, (ii) the broad cylinder of manoxylic secondary xylem characterised by multiseriate medullary rays, (iii) the outer cortex composed of dark radially Fig. 402. Lyginopteris oldhamia. Transverse section of the type-specimen in the Binney Collection, Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge. (After Arber.) disposed and oblique bands of mechanical tissue separated from one another by partially destroyed and tangentially elongated parenchymatous elements. It is this outer cortex that Williamson aptly compared with the Koman numerals on a clock-face. In the perimedullary region and in contact with the inner edge of the secondary-xylem cylinder are six strands of primary xylem 1 Arber, E. A. N. (02). 40 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. representing the xylem halves of collateral bundles separated from the primary phloem strands by the intervening cylinder of secondary wood. Two of the primary xylem strands in lateral contact are seen in fig. 404, C; the other four occur as separate bundles. Each primary xylem strand contains a small group of spirally thickened protoxylem elements (fx) associated with a few parenchymatous cells. The large primary tracheids internal to the protoxylem are characterised by multiseriate bordered pits on their walls, while those external to the protoxylem, which are in contact with the innermost secondary tracheids, have scalariform pitting. The dark patch s (fig. 404, C) is a portion of the large group of sclerenchymatous cells, shown in figs. 402, 403. The perimedullary xylem strands of mesarch structure are the lower portions of leaf -traces and, as Scott points out, 'each of the bundles surrounding the pith is, in fact, a sympodium, com- posed of the united lower ends of successive adjacent leaf-traces.' The larger of the two bundles shown in fig. 404, C, is on the point of passing out to a leaf, while the smaller strand is on its way to a higher level before bending outwards through the secondary wood. Slightly beyond the middle of the secondary xylem there is an arc of narrower tracheids comparable with an incomplete annual ring. Although zones or arcs of narrow tracheids are not uncommon in the wood of Lyginopteris there is no satisfactory evidence of regularly recurring seasonal changes. On the outer face of the secondary wood are a few leaf-trace strands pursuing a vertical course in the pericycle region; but the structure and behaviour of these bundles are more clearly illustrated in the stem reproduced in fig. 403. The tissue between the crushed phloem and pericycle and the outer cortex (fig. 402) consists of radially compressed parenchyma with scattered secretory cells separated from the more internal tissue by a narrow band of periderm formed by a phellogen in the outer part of the pericycle. A larger and better preserved stem, 3-7 cm. in diameter, is seen in fig. 403. In this stem the pith of parenchyma and scattered sclerenchymatous nests is larger in proportion to the stele than in Binney's type-specimen. From the inner edge of the secondary xylem several primary xylem-strands project as rounded wedges or tangentially elongated groups where two traces are laterally xxix] LYGINOPTERIDEAE 41 Fig. 403. Lyginopteris oldhamia. a — e, foliar bundles; /, decurrent base of petiole; r, r', roots; s, seed (Lagenostoma). (x 3. Kidston Coll. 592, B.) 42 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. united in the perimedullaiy zone. The cylinder of secondary wood is partially interrupted at r by the bending outwards of the stele of an adventitious root cut across transversely as it bends down after emerging from the outer cortical region. In more or less close association with the outer surface of the secondary xylem are four pairs of leaf-trace bundles and one larger trace at d containing two widely separated protoxylem strands and faced externally with an arc of secondary xylem: this is a leaf- trace which shows by the slight constriction on the outer edge of its primary xylem that it is beginning to divide into a pair of equal strands. A precisely similar strand is shown on a larger scale in fig. 404, D. The twin bundles seen at h, fig. 403, represent a divided leaf-trace at a slightly higher level than the partially severed trace at d^ and the arcs of secondary xylem are narrower. The appearance of the double leaf-trace at a still higher level is shown at c: the two strands are farther apart and the secondary xylem has almost disappeared, while those at e, nearer their entrance into the leaf-stalk, consist exclu- sively of primary xylem and phloem. At a the two strands of a leaf-trace, still nearer to the petiole, are inclined towards one another preparatory to reunion after reaching the leaf-stalk. A slender root is seen in transverse section at r' immediately outside the two leaf-bundles. As Williamson and Scott^ have pointed out, there are always five leaf-traces beyond the xylem cylinder of a Lyginopteris stem as seen in transverse section, and these traces in the pericycle, separated from one another by f of the circumference, alternate in position with the lower portions of leaf -traces in the perimedullary region of the same stem. The phyllotaxis is thus seen to be f . The secondary wood is succeeded by a cambium of normal structure passing gradually into a narrow band of secondary phloem which in well-preserved stems is seen to consist of sieve- tubes and parenchyma with medullary rays rather broader than those in the xylem. Beyond the phloem is the comparatively broad pericycle consisting of parenchyma with nests of scleren- chyma like those in the pith and scattered secretory cells. In the outer layers of the pericycle a phellogen was formed at an 1 Williamson and Scott (95). XXIX] LYGINOPTERIDEAE 43 early stage in the growth of* the plant, producing several layers of secondary tissue, which is regarded as periderm and forms a conspicuous feature in Lyginopteris stems; it appears as a com- paratively dark sinuous band where it bends outwards to wrap round the leaf -traces in their almost vertical course through the pericyclic region (fig. 403). The periderm is clearly seen at p close to the crushed secondary phloem of the dividing leaf-trace in fig. 404, D. All the leaf- traces seen in fig. 403 beyond the secondary wood are still within the deep-seated periderm and, as Williamson and Scott showed, each leaf-trace after emerging from the secondary wood remains in the pericycle-zone for a length of five internodes as it very gradually inclines outwards. Once free from this region the twin bundles bend more sharply towards the petiole. Stated briefly, the history of each leaf-trace from the perimedullary region to the leaf-base is as follows: at the outer edge of the pith a single trace consists of a mesarch xylem bundle with one protoxylem strand; it passes vertically through five internodes and then bends out through a foliar gap in the xylem-cyUnder, and the primary tracheids receive additions from the cambium of the stele on their outer face. As the trace leaves the secondary xylem it bends upwards and, as seen at d, fig. 403, begins to divide into twin bundles. As the trace passes higher the bisection of the protoxylem and metaxylem is completed and the secondary xylem-arcs are gradually lost until the separate strands of each pair are reduced to single mesarch bundles composed wholly of primary tracheids. As the trace bends outwards through the cortex the phloem gradually encircles each xylem-strand until a concentric structure is substituted for the collateral dis- position of the conducting tissue. At the same time the proto- xylem strands divide and occupy a position near the inner edge of the metaxylem. On reaching the petiole or after passing some distance up the axis of the frond, the twin bundles unite and usually form a V-shaped vascular strand (figs. 404, E; 405, A). The single meristele subsequently divides into two equal portions preparatory to the bifurcation of the petiole (fig. 406). The inner cortex, consisting of parenchymatous tissue and many secretory cells with an occasional group of sclerenchymatous elements in place of the abundant nests of this tissue in the peri- 44 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. Fig. 404. Lyginopteris oldhamia. A, B. Frond fragments; a, pinnule; b, reticulum of sclerenchyma. C. Portion of stele of the stem reproduced in fig. 402. D. px, protoxylem; s, sclerenchyma; leaf- trace close to the edge of the secondary xylem; p, periderm. E. Petiole; m, meristele. (A, Kidston Coll. 664 B; B, Camb. Botany School 508; C, Binney Coll. 179; D, E, Camb. Botany School, 93, 159.) XXIX] LYGINOPTERIDEAE 45 cycle, has been invaded in the stem shown in fig. 403 by numerous rootlets of Stigmaria and Lyginopteris, some of which are seen interrupting the continuity of the outer cortex. The greater width of the cortical region at /, fig. 403, is due to the decurrent base of a petiole the meristele of which is not included in the section. The lighter and broader bands between the cross-sections of the stereome-network in the outer cortex are occupied by re- mains of tangentially stretched parenchymatous cells, and beyond this zone in a younger stem there are a few layers of parenchyma forming the superficial tissue, but there appears to be no well- defined epidermal layer. Young stems have been recognised in which there is very little secondary xylem and phloem: in these the stereome bands in the outer cortex are closer together than in the stretched hypo- dermal tissue of older shoots and the scattered sclerous nests are represented by unthickened cells. In addition to young stems Williamson and Scott described a distinct type of small stem in which the primary xylem forms an almost complete ring^ com- parable with the primary xylem of some adult Sigillarian stems (vol. II. p. 220) but distinguished by its mesarch structure and by the reticulate pitting of the centripetal xylem. A characteristic feature of the stem is the occurrence of emergences from the outer cortex which have the structure either of spinous processes, broadly linear or flask-shaped, or of stalked glands 2. A portion of a glandular emergence is shown in fig. 405, B : the group of small cells immediately below the blunt apex is in this instance still intact though showing signs of disorganisation in the centre ; but in many cases the secretory tissue has not been preserved and the head of the emergence is occupied by a space. A single stoma is seen at s in longitudinal section. Further reference to the emergences is made in the description of the leaf. It occasionally happens that a meristematic layer is formed in the parenchymatous tissue immediately internal to some of the perimedullary xylem strands of a Lyginopteris stem from which either secondary parenchyma is produced or a zone of secondary xylem and phloem, the phloem facing the centre of the pith. An example of such internal xylem was figured by 1 Williamson and Scott (95) p. 720. ^ Williamson (90) PI. xn. fig. 6. 46 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. Williamson 1 and similar occurrences are more fully dealt with by Williamson and Scott^ who consider that the perimedullary cambium may represent an internal extension through a leaf-gap of the normal cambial cylinder. In the stem represented in fig. 403 there are two perimedullary xylem strands to the left of the bottom of the V-shaped gap in the secondary xylem-cylinder, r, and on the inner face of one of these, as shown in fig. 405, C, there is a narrow arc of internal secondary xylem, c, between the xylem-strand and the outer edge of one of the sclerous nests. The sporadic occurrence of arcs of inversely orientated secondary vascular tissue affords an interesting parallel with a similar mor- phological feature in some recent Dicotyledonous genera such as Tecoma and lodes. As Williamson and Scott point out, this similarity affords 'a striking warning against the indiscriminate use of even conspicuous anatomical characters^.' While admitting the necessity of guarding against the danger of attaching impor- tance to occasional and abnormal characters they may have some significance as collateral evidence in comparisons of different types of stems. It is conceivable that these anomalous arcs of secondary tissue on the inner side of the primary xylem strands may, as Worsdell* maintains, be reversions to an ancestral character and in this sense comparable with the strands of inverted vascular tissue in some recent Cycadean stems. The question of relation- ship of Lyginopteris and allied types to recent Cycads and the Palaeozoic Medulloseae is considered in a later chapter. In 1902 Lomax^ described two branching specimens of Lygin- opteris, and more recently two others have been discovered at a locality near Bacup in Lancashire which have been thoroughly investigated by Miss Brenchley® who constructed models from drawings of serial sections'^. One specimen shows six leaf-bases in a length of 4| inches and branches spring from the axils of five of them: some of the branches show secondary ramifications. The phyllotaxis of the leaf-bases on a branch is always the reverse of that on the main stem, a divergence to which no parallel was 1 WiUiamson (90) PL xm. fig. 3, 6. 2 Williamson and Scott (95) PI. xxiii. fig. 8. ^ /^i^;. p. 722. 4 Worsdell (06) pp. 140 et seq. ^ Lomax (02). ^ Brenchley (13). 7 For a description of the method, see Salisbury (13). XXIX] LYGINOPTERIDEAE 47 found in a selection of trees and shrubs examined by Miss Brenchley. The secondary wood of the stem swells below the point of exit of a branch and frequently a fairly large amount of wood occurs in the pith when a branch is given off: this anomalous wood may help to close the branch-gap. ii. Leaf. In his account of Lyginofteris stems published in 1873 William- son^ suggested that the vascular bundles met with outside the xylem-cylinder might be the leaf-traces of large fronds and expressed the opinion that the 'stems or petioles' previously described by him under the generic name Edraxylon might belong to Lyginopteris. A year later he substituted the name Rachi- ofteris aspera for the petioles previously referred to Edraxylon and inclined to the view that this type of Rachiopteris may be the petiole of the Carboniferous fronds known as Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi Brongn., an inference based to a large extent on the occurrence of emergences on Rachiopteris aspera (fig. 404, E) preserved as petrifactions like those on impressions of Sphen- opteris Hoeninghausi as figured by Brongniart (figs. 404, A; 405, D, D'). In 1890 Williamson was able to demonstrate the truth of the surmise that Rachiopteris aspera and Lyghiopteris oldhamia are respectively the petiole and stem of the same plant, which he believed to be an arborescent fern 2. The petioles of Lyginopteris fronds, which may reach a diameter of 1 cm., are attached by a broad base to the stem, and as already suggested by the number of internodes traversed by each leaf- trace, the leaves are comparatively far apart. A transverse section of a petiole is shown diagrammatically in fig. 405 A. The hypodermal stereome is a prominent feature, but the narrow radial plates of the stem-cortex tend to be replaced in the rachis by broader and confluent masses of strengthening elements: the upper surface of the petiole is slightly grooved. Glandular and spinous emergences are often very abundant, as in the section reproduced in fig. 404, E. A glandular emergence is seen at a in fig. 405, A. The spinous emergences may be compared with 1 Williamson (73) A. p. 403. 2 Williamson (90). 48 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. those of Davallia (Odontosoria) aculeata^, a West Indian fern of climbing habit and with the prickles on Hemitelia and other recent Cyatheaceous fronds^, while capitate glands, though simpler than those of Lyginopteris, occur on the leaf-stalks of some recent Polypodiaceous species^. The concentric meristele may consist Fig. 405. Lyginopteris oldhamia. A, petiole section; a, glandular emergence; r, root. B, stalked gland ; s, stoma. C, inner edge of wood of a stem ; c, arc of inversely orientated vascular tissue. D, D', part of a frond of Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi. E, part of axis of D. (A, C, D, Kidston Coll. ; B, Manchester Coll. R. 645.) in the lower part of the petiole of two separate and slightly curved strands like those seen in fig. 404, E, m: sooner or later the two strands unite to form a wide-open V or a W-shaped bundle with several slightly internal protoxylem groups close to the lower edge. The two sections represented in fig. 406, A and 1 Vol. II. p. 299, fig. 232. 3 Hohlke (02). 2 Bower (12) Pis. xxx. xxxiii. XXIX] LYGINOPTERIDEAE 4& B show the gradual divergence of the two meristeles of a petiole as they approach the level where it divides into two equal branches, a characteristic feature of Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi and allied fronds. At a lower level than that represented in fig. 406 the vascular strand of the petiole would have the form of a W as. figured by Williamson in one of his earlier memoirs i. The phloem with scattered secretory sacs and the adjacent tissue of the leaf- stalk are occasionally preserved in wonderful perfection 2. No endodermis has been recognised. Sclerous nests are scattered in the ground-tissue as are also secretory sacs (figs. 404, E ; 405, A). A small root r has penetrated the parenchyma of the rachis shown in fig. 405, A. Fig. 406. Lyginopteris oldhamia. Transverse section illustrating branching of petiole, x 5. (From a drawing supplied by Prof. Oliver.) Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi Brongn,^, founded on material from English Coal Measures, was regarded by Williamson as the foliage of Lyginopteris chiefly on the ground of the occurrence of emer- gences on the axes (figs. 404, A, B) and laminae of the impressions like those on the petrified stems, and this comparison received support from the resemblance of the fragments of pinnules asso- ciated with Lyginopteris and its petioles in the calcareous nodules 1 Williamson (74) PI. li. fig. 1. 2 Scott (09) B. fig. 139, p. 375. ^ Brongniart (28) A. p. 199, PI. lii. For synonymy, see Kidston (11) p. 42> s. Ill 4 50 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. to the leaflets of Brongniart's type. This identification is sup- ported by subsequent work. The quadripinnate fronds, which attain a considerable size, resemble those of recent species of Davallia and other ferns, but the forking of the rachis and branches of the frond is a striking feature : the pinnae may reach a length of 15 cm.^ The portion of carbonised rachis shown in fig. 405, E, reveals the existence of a hypodermal reticulum like that in the outer cortex of a Lyginopteris stem and the same feature is seen in the more slender axis represented in fig. 404, A, at 6.^ The pinnules are usually deeply lobed and the segments may be comparatively broad and blunt or narrow^ (fig. 290, C, vol. ii. p. 399; fig. 404, A, a, B; fig. 405, D'). The lamina has a well marked dorsiventral structure: the palisade-tissue next the upper surface is separated from the epidermis by small hypo- dermal cells, possibly functioning as a water-storage layer, and the central part of the mesophyll consists of loose aerenchyma: the veins are collateral as in recent ferns and stomata occur in the lower epidermis. Emergences are seen both on impressions (fig. 405, D') and on petrified specimens. A striking feature of the pinnules is the rounded surface caused by the revolute edge of the lamina as seen in the section reproduced in fig. 404, B. This character coupled with the occasional occurrence of groups of short tracheal elements at the termination of the veins denotes a tendency to a xerophilous habit. On the strength of a very close resemblance between Sphenop- teris Hoeninghausi and Calytnmatotheca Stangeri (fig. 408, E, F) — characterised by fertile pinnules bearing stellate groups of ismall linear valves, regarded by Stur as the open lobes of an indusium— Zeiller included Brongniart's type in the genus Calym- matotheca. The resemblance in general habit between the two species extends to the presence in their rachises of the Dictyoxylon form of cortex*. The view formerly held by some authors that the valve-like appendages to the fertile segments of Calymmato- theca are sporangia is incorrect: a re-examination of Stur's 1 Zeiller (88) A. p. 82, PL vi. 2 See also Kidston (06) B, fig. 5, p. 417; Renier (10^), Pis. 60, 70. 3 Kidston (06) B. 4 Stur (77) p. 257, Pis. xxv. xxvi. XXIX] LYGINOPTERIDEAE 51 specimen (fig. 408, E, F) has confirmed the original description^. The stellate lobes are now regarded as portions of a cupular investment of a seed similar to Layenostoma Lomaxi, the female reproductive apparatus of Lyginopteris oldhamia. The axes of the fertile pinnae bear small thorn-like emergences probably identical with those on the cupule of Lagenostonia and on the petioles of Lyginopteris oldhamia. It was stated in vol. ii that the fronds known as Sphenopteris Linkii (Goepp.) represent, with other closely allied forms, leaves belonging to Heterangium stems. This statement was based on a misconception : the rachis of Sphenopteris Linkii, as I have satisfied myself by an examination of impressions shown to me by Dr Kidston, exhibits the reticulate pattern characteristic of Lyginopteris and not the transverse ribs characteristic of Heterangium. It is not an easy task even for those most familiar with Carboniferous fronds to distinguish clearly between species agreeing generally with Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi, a species regarded by some authors as the type of a group of very similar and closely allied forms all of which were probably borne on stems referable to the genus Lyginopteris. The species Lyginop- teris oldhamia as generally understood probably includes more than one specific type, and it is safe to assert that in the Carboni- ferous period Lyginopteris was represented by several forms characterised by highly compound fronds with forked rachises like Sphenopteris Linkii, S. Hoeninghausi, and others. The features characteristic of fronds included in the Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi group have recently been described by Gothan^. Stur's generic name Calymmatotheca originally applied to the species C. Stangeri was applied to Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi by Zeiller, and although the fronds of the latter type have not been found with fertile appendages of the Calymmatotheca type there can be no doubt as to the generic identity of these, barely distin- guishable, species both of which belong to stems of Lyginopteris. Prof. Johnson^ has recently described some impressions from the Coal Measures of Ireland, which he refers to S. Hoeninghausi, bearing stellate groups of lobes like those of Calymmatotheca, and in one case he describes a seed in the middle of the carbonised 1 Oliver (05) fig. 6. ^ Qothan (13) p. 40. » Johnson (11). 4—2 52 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. remains of a stellate group of cupular segments. An examination of the specimen in Dublin convinced me that there is no satis- factory evidence of the seed-nature of the appearance on the rock believed by Johnson to be an elliptical Lagenostoma-like seed. The actual attachment of the stellate lobes to the pinnae of the frond is not clearly demonstrated. iii. Microsforangia. In 1905 Kids ton ^ announced the discovery of microsporangia on fronds of Lyginopteris : he described specimens from the Coal Measures of Dudley identified by him with Sphenopteris Hoening- hausi showing sterile and fertile pinnae in organic connexion. The fertile pinnules (fig. 407, B) are sHghtly expanded distally into an oval limb about 2 mm. long bearing 6 to 7 bilocular fusiform microsporangia 3 mm. long and 1-5 mm. broad: in the immature condition the sorus is hemispherical, the summit being formed of the incurved apices of the sporangia. At maturity the sporangia spread out, the sorus assuming the form of an epaulet. Fig. 408, H, shows a sorus in transverse section and in fig. 408, G, the limb and two pendulous sporangia are shown. The microspores, 50 — 70 jj, in diameter, are studded with numerous blunt spines and each spore shows a triradiate ridge. The section reproduced in fig. 407, A, from the Coal Measures of Oldham is probably a bilocular sporangium of the same type as those described by Kidston from Dudley. Dr Kidston^ describes a second type of microsporangial sorus as CrossotJieca Hughesiana which agrees closely with C. Hoeninghausi, but the fertile segments are not associated with any sterile pinnae. The generic name Crossotheca, founded by Zeiller^ in 1883, was substituted for Sphenopteris on the ground that Brongniart's species S. Hoening- hausi is shown to possess sporangia of the Crossotheca type. If Kidston's specific determination is correct, his discovery demon- strates that Lyginopteris fronds bore microsporangia having the characters of Crossotheca, a type characteristic of several Carboni- ferous species belonging both to the form-genera Sphenopteris and Pecopteris. Eeference has already been made to the difficulty of distinguishing between impressions of fronds of the Sphenopteris 1 Kidston (05). ^ Kidston (06) B. 3 ZeiUer (83) B. xxix] LYGINOPTERID E AE 53 Hoeninghausi group, a difficulty that is illustrated by Dr Gothan's statement^ that the Dudley specimens of Crossotheca are not identical in the character of the sterile pinnules with Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi. An examination of Dr Kidston's specimens led me to agree with his determination ; but, it may be asked, have 1 ^'AJt jr,i .. Fig. 407. A, B. Crossotheca Hoeninghausi. C. Pinnule with a sporangium, s. (A, Kidston Coll. 1277; B, after Kidston; C, Camb. Botany School. 508.) we any evidence of the association with Lyginopteris fronds of sporangia other than those of the Crossotheca type? Prof. Chodat^ believes that certain petrified fragments of pinnules occasionally met with in the calcareous nodules bearing sessile and apparently annulate sporangia belong to Lyginopteris fronds. These sporangia appear to be identical with those named by Gothan (13) p. 49. 2 Chodat (08) B. 54 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. Scott Pteridotheca Butterworthi^ and regarded by him as filicean sporangia that cannot be referred to any known Carboniferous genus. The piece of lamina bearing an empty sporangium, which may or may not have possessed an annulus, reproduced in fig. 407, C, occurs in association with the larger specimen shown in fig. 404, B, and it would seem not unreasonable to regard both as parts of the same frond, namely a frond of Lyginop- teris. As Prof. Weiss ^ points out, the accurate determination of small pieces of petrified pinnules is exceedingly difficult and without more decisive evidence we are hardly justified in asserting that the sporangia figured by Chodat and Scott and that shown in fig. 407 belong to the genus Lyginopteris. Although the available data appear to favour the view generally held that Kidston's conclusion is correct additional evidence would be welcome. Telmigium. Eeference was made in vol. ii.^ to the genus Telangium instituted by Dr Benson for some petrified sporangia from the Coal Measures regarded by her as the microsporangia of a Pteridosperm, probably Lyginopteris. The sporangia of Telangium are similar to those of Crossotheca. Scott points out that they are borne on a flat disc or lamina * quite comparable to a fertile pinna of Crossotheca^,^ and he concludes that these sporangia are not generically distinct from the impressions on which the genus Crossotheca was founded. • Kids ton ^ regards Telangium Scotti, Benson, as the microsporangium of a Pteridosperm though not of Lyginopteris, on the ground that the microsporangia described by Miss Benson are not attached to a limb and that they have a single loculus in place of the double loculus (fig. 407, A) of Crossotheca. The presence of a limb in Telangium recognised by Scott removes one of these distinguishing features. There are, however, no adequate reasons for regarding Telangium Scotti as specifically identical with Crossotheca Hoeninghausi. The synangium of Telangium Scotti, 5 mm. in length, consists of 6 — 12 sporangia united basally and opening when ripe by longitudinal dehiscence. Fig. 493, E, shows eight sporangia of a synangium in transverse section: the two sporangia at the lower end of the section are less distinct than the others, some are full of spores 1 Scott (08) B. p. 292. ^ ^eiss, F. E. (12). 3 Vol. ii. p. 532. * Scott (09) B. p. 400. s Kidston (06) B. XXIX] LAGENOSTOMA 55 and others have shed their contents by the splitting of the thin inner walls of the loculi. The sporangial walls are composed of an outer layer of large cells with dark contents succeeded by 2 — 3 layers of smaller and crushed cells. The spores, 5 — 6 /x x 3-5 — 4 fL in diameter, have a reticiilately sculptured exine: Dr Benson^ states that they agree closely with pollen-grains found in the pollen-chamber of Lagenostoma ovoides except in their slightly smaller size ; she notes the association of Telangium with fragments of the vegetative organs of Lyginopteris and draws attention to resemblances in the structure of the tissues; but the most interesting comparison, at least in an academic sense, is with the seed Lagenostoma, the integumented megasporangium of Lyginop- teris. Dr Benson points out that a transverse section of a Lageno- stoma in the plane of the canopy, showing the nucellar apex surrounded by radially disposed chambers (fig. 409), presents a certain resemblance to a synangium of Telangium Scotti; and it is suggested that the chambers encircling the nucellus may represent sterilised sister-sporangia 2. ' The seed in fact is assumed to be a synangium in which all but one of the sporangia are sterile, and form an integument to the one fertile sporangium which has become a megasporangium with one large megaspore.' This view% though clearly incapable of confirmation in the present state of our knowledge, is not merely an ingenious hypothesis but a stimulating suggestion as to possible homologies : as an argument in favour of associating Lagenostoma and Telangium as the spore- bearing organs of the same plant it has but little weight. iv. The Seed. Lagenostoma Williamson. Lagenostoma Lomaxi, Oliver and Scott ex Williamson, MS. In 1877 Williamson^ proposed the generic name Lagenostoma for some petrified seeds from the Lower Coal Measures of Lanca- shire and described two species, Lagenostoma ovoides and L. physoides: in his ms. Catalogue a third type is referred to as Lagenostoma Lomaxi. It is this third type that Prof. Oliver 1 Benson (04) B. 2 In his account of the ovule of Stangeria Lang (00) discusses the possibility of homologising the ovule with a sorus consisting of one sporangium. 3 Williamson (77) B. p. 234. 56 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. was the first to recognise as the megaspore-bearing organ of Lyginofteris oldhamia. Its structure has been thoroughly described by Oliver and Scott^ and these authors contribute a judicial summary of the evidence on which Lagenostoma and Lyginopteris are believed to stand for one and the same plant. The evidence is based chiefly on the following considerations: an agreement in the structure of the vascular bundles in the investments of the seed with those in the leaves of Lyginopteris ; the presence in the outer envelope of the seed of stalked glands identical with those on the stems and petioles. The evidence does not as yet amount to absolute proof, as the seeds, which occur either with or without a stalk, have not been found attached to a Lyginopteris frond. But 'where vegetative and reproductive organs presenting identical structural features, not known to occur in other plants, are thus found in close and constant association, the inference that the one belonged to the other appears irresistible.' While most botanists believe that a satisfactory case is established there are a few^ who refuse to believe in a connexion between Lagenostoma and Lyginopteris until an actual union has been demonstrated. The discovery by Kidston^ of seeds attached to pinnae bearing Neuropteris pinnules and the demonstration of organic continuity between seeds and the pinnules of other Palaeozoic fern-like fronds supply abundant confirmatory evidence that leaves no doubt as to the occurrence of seeds on modified pinnae of Sphenop- teris Hoeninghausi and of other closely allied fronds which represent the foliage of different forms of Lyginopteris. In this connexion it is pertinent to add that Grand'Eury* has found seeds of the Lagenostoma type in close association with impressions of Sphenop- teris Dubuissonis and other leaves of similar habit. A seed of Lagenostoma Lomaxi reaches a length of 5-5 mm. with a maximum diameter of 4-4 mm. ; it is broadly oval or barrel- like (fig. 408, C) and when immature was invested by a loose irregularly lobed glandular envelope (fig. 408, B) from which the seed eventually freed itself by a natural process of abscission. The central body or nucellus, except in the apical region, is concrescent with a fairly stout integument or testa (fig. 408, C, /) the outer 1 OUver and Scott (03) : (04). ^ Horich (06) p. 48. 3 Kidston (052) g. * Grand 'Eury (05^) B. LAGENOSTOMA Fig. 408. A, A', Lagenospermum Sinclairi. B, Lagenostoma, restoration. C, Lage- nostoma Lomaxi ; c, micropyle ; d, space between integument and nucellus ; e, eupule; /, integument; ch, chalaza. D, microspores of Lagenostoma ovoides. E, F, Calymmatotheca Stangeri. G, H, Crossotheca Hoeninghausi. H, section of G in line of arrow. (A, after Arber; B, C, E, F, after Oliver; D, after Benson; G, H, after Kidston.) 58 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. portion of which is characterised by regular longitudinal rows of palisade-like cells comparable with the broad palisade-layer in the sporocarp of Pilularia. On the exposed surface of this palisade- tissue are small dark structureless pegs^, possibly the remains of a mucilaginous layer such as occurs on the seed-coats of some recent Flowering plants. At the base of the nucellus the chalazal region, fig. 408, C, ch, is provided with sclerous elements and forms a hard investment to the axial vascular strand from the pedicel. It is at the base of this chalazal region that the seed is eventually cut off by an absciss-layer. The integument is supplied throughout its length by nine vascular bundles of Fig. 409. Lagenostoma. Transverse section near the micropyle, showing the pollen-chamber, pc, the space, s, between the nucellus and integument, the fluted canopy with vascular bundles, v. (After Oliver.) endarch, or approximately endarch, structure. The free portion of the integument seen from the outside (fig. 408, B) has the form of a fluted cone with a circular opening at its summit. The greater part of this domical apex, as seen in longitudinal section in fig. 408, C, appears to be hollow, but in the living state the dome, or canopy as Williamson called it, was filled with parenchyma in which the vascular bundles were embedded and, as shown in the transverse section in fig. 409, the canopy is divided into compartments by radial septa which in its basal region are replaced 1 Oliver and Scott (04) PL x. fig. 28; McLean (12). XXIX] LAGENOSTOMA 69 by regular and deep furrows on the inner face. Enclosed by the canopy, with its outer surface fluted as the result of the partial collapse of the outer wall of each compartment due to the decay of the filling tissue, is the flask-shaped apex of the nucellus; between the apical cone of nucellar parenchyma and the super- ficial layer is an annular cavity which Williamson^ called the lagenostome. The parenchymatous core tapers to a narrow summit which shghtly overtops the integument and is constricted at the broad base (fig. 493, A, B; page 311). The bottle-shaped apical tissue is separated by an annular space, c, fig. 493, B, from the limiting layer of the nucellus: this space is the pollen- chamber formed in the living seed by the disorganisation of the subepidermal cells of the nucellar apex. The pollen-chamber is a feature characteristic of recent cycadean ovules (see p. 6). In Lagenostoma the annular form of the pollen-chamber is a peculiarity distinguishing this type of seed from those of recent Gymnosperms and most other Palaeozoic seeds. As Oliver says, it marks an 'advance in precision'^ over other forms as the micro- spores which fall into the chamber are brought direct to the surface of the underlying megaspore and presumably to the archegonia which, it is reasonable to believe, were disposed in a circle at the base of the annular crevice. Microspores frequently occur in the pollen-chamber and some have been discovered apparently in the act of liberating male gametes^. The outer wall of the nucellus is bounded externally by a similar circular space (d, figs. 408, C; 493, B) which separates it from the domical canopy. In the great majority of specimens the central tissue of the seed is not preserved and an empty sac supported from the base of the nucellus-apex occupies nearly the whole of the interior : the shrunken wall of the sac is all that remains of the large megaspore. It would seem, then, that the nucellus was almost completely destroyed as a consequence of the growth of the megaspore or embryo-sac, which eventually occupied nearly the whole of the seed-body. In an exceptionally well preserved specimen recently described and admirably illustrated by Mr McLean* part of the parenchy- matous tissue of the pro th alius which originally filled the megaspore 1 WiUiamson (76). 2 Oliver (03) p. 462. » Benson (08). -» McLean (12). 60 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. is clearly seen : its surface-layer consists of small cells succeeded by a broad band of radially elongated elements closely resembling the alveoli in the prothalli of some recent Gymnosperms, parti- cularly certain Conifers. No archegonia have been discovered. The cupular envelope of immature seeds, compared by Oliver and Scott with the lobed and glandular husk of Corylus colurna L.^, receives several vascular bundles of collateral and mesarch structure from the axial strand, and these subdivide as they ascend. The glands which occur on all parts of the cupule are sessile or stalked and identical with those on the vegetative organs of Lyginopteris. Assuming that pollination occurred at a com- paratively early stage in the development of the seed when the cupule was still intact, it is conceivable, as Sir Joseph Hooker suggested, that the glandular secretion may have attracted insects and so aided in the transport of pollen which were perhaps drawn down the narrow pollen-chamber by exuded mucilage as in recent Conifers. The evidence obtained in recent years in favour of insect-polKnation in certain Cycads and in Welwitschia lends support to this view: the dragon flies hovering over a fertile Lyginopteris frond in a recent restoration^ may be a legitimate addition. A striking feature of Lagenostoma as of other Palaeozoic seeds is the absence of an embryo : this and other considerations have led certain authors, notably Chodat^, to question the justi- fication for the use of the term seed. Various suggestions have been offered in explanation of this fact. In recent Cycads, as already pointed out, the development of the embryo does not always occur before seed-fall. It may be that these older seeds had no resting-period or there may have been a period of rest after fertilisation and not as now at a stage subsequent to the formation of the embryo*; it is also suggested by Scott that 'the nursing of the embryo had not yet come to be one of the functions of the seed, and that the whole embryonic development was relegated to the germination stage^.' In this connexion 1 For figure, see Lotsy (09) p. 714. 2 Scott (11) p. 105. 3 Chodat (08) B. i Scott (03). 5 Scott (09) B. p. 220. See also OUver (05); Oliver and Scott (04) p. 231. XXIX] LAGENOSTOMA 61 reference may be made to a statement by Miss Gibbs^ who speaks of seeds of a Podocarpus picked up from the ground in apparently a mature state and with the associated bracts coloured and swollen as though ready to aid in dispersal but with no embryo : the seeds had matured before fertilisation and fell from the tree after pollination. Whatever may be the true explanation of the absence of embryos this negative character should not be allowed to outweigh the evidence furnished by morphological features as to the applicability of the term seed. As Prof. Oliver says, 'there is a long chapter in evolution to be deciphered before we can connect... the seed of Lyginodendron with the sporangium of any fern at present known to us'^. The cupule of Lagenostoma has been homologised with the outer part of the integument of a recent cycadean seed^ which, it is suggested, consists of an inner and an outer envelope that have become concrescent, and this hypothesis is supported by another author ^ by a comparison between Lagenostoma and Gnetalean seeds*. A comparison has also been made between the collar of a Ginkgo seed and the much more conspicuous cupule of Lagenostoma^. Dr Benson and Miss Welsford^ institute a comparison between the vascular supply of the outer integument of the ovules of Carpinus and Moras and that of the cupule of Lagenostoma, a comparison suggested by Miss Kershaw's remarks'^ on the similarity between the vascular system of the ovules of Myrica Gale and Trigonocarpus. In 1908 Dr Benson^ described some germinating microspores in the pollen-chamber of another species of Lagenostoma, L. ovoides, and recognised what she believed to be antherozoids. I am indebted to this author for allowing me to make a drawing from her section (fig. 408, D). Two microspores are seen with thick outer walls showing irregular holes probably of secondary origin and not part of a regular reticulum as Dr Benson suggests. Close to the upper microspore is a hemispherical body, s, described as a male gamete, and a 1 Gibbs (12) p. 46. 2 Oliver (06). 3 Slopes (05); Prankerd (12). * Sykes (10) p. 219; Thoday (Sykes, M. G.) (11) p. 1124. 5 Shaw (08). 8 Benson and Welsford (09) p. 633. 7 Kershaw (09) p. 359. « Benson (08). 62 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. similar body is seen still enclosed by the lower microspore. It is by no means improbable that these are antherozoids : they were presumably ciliate like those of Ginkgo and recent Cycads (fig. 396, M). The microspores are approximately 70 /x in length and the supposed antherozoids have a maximum diameter of 45 IX, the latter being about f the size of the sperms of Microcycas and -J the diameter of those of Zamia. The smaller and more delicate cells near the lower microspore (fig. 408, D) are no doubt fungal cells as Miss Benson suggests. With reference to the difficulty of determining the nature of Miss Benson's supposed gametes it is worth calling attention to some figures given by Zopf^ of vesicular cells and sporangia of the Phycomycetous genera Rhizophidium and Lagenidium in the pollen of Flowering plants and Pines. It has been suggested by Burlingame^ that the ' gametes ' may be prothallial cells ; but this is very improbable. Lagenostoma ovoides Williamson. In the memoir in which the genus was founded Williamson described two species from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire, Lagenostoma ovoides and L. physoides^. The seeds described under the latter name had previously been assigned by him to another new genus, Physostoma, and named P. elegans^. Lagenostoma physoides was afterwards figured by Butterworth^ who recognised some new features. For this species Prof. Oliver^ has adopted Williamson's earlier name, Physostoma elegans. The former species, which has recently received exhaustive treatment by Miss Prankerd^, agrees generally in its morphological characters with L. Lomaxi, but differs in the structure of the surface-tissue of the integument and in some anatomical features. Moreover no cupules have been found and there is 'very little trace of a layer of separation' such as occurs in L. Lomaxi. Over the surface of the integument is a layer of prismatic cells, much shorter and less palisade-like than those in L. Lomaxi, and there are none of the pegs which are a constant feature in that species. There 1 Zopf (92) Pis. I. II. 2 Burlingame (15). 3 Williamson (77) B. * Williamson (76) p. 160. 5 Butterworth (97). « OUver (09) p. 74. 7 Prankerd (12). XXIX] LAGENOSTOMA 63 are, however, indications that mucilage was poured out by the rupture of the distended cells. Some microspores were found in the pollen-chamber with an average size of 72 x 53 /x; they may be as much as 90 /x long. None were observed with sperm- like contents like those described by Dr Benson. Miss Prankerd discusses the morphology of the integument in relation to that of cycadean seeds and makes an instructive comparison between the lagenostome (that is the modified nucellar apex) and such fern sporangia as those of Angiopteris, Osmunda, and Schizaea, but especially the sporangia of Senftenhergia^ with their multiseriate annulus. An interesting feature is shown in the longitudinal section reproduced in fig. 493, A (p. 311). The apex of the nucellar €one appears to be composed of thick-walled, dark cells and it is suggested that this may have served as a stopper blocking up the circular orifice of the pollen-chamber (seen below the apex between the nucellar cone and the thick surface-layer of the nucellus) and serving as a protection to the embryo. A comparable closing-up of the micropyle occurs in the seeds of Gnetum Gnemon^ and in the beak of cycadean seeds. At the time of pollination, when the pollen-chamber must have extended to the apex of the lagenostome, the tip of the nucellar cone may have secreted some sticky substance to which the microspores would adhere. Prof. Lignier^ has recently described some large megasporangia from the Westphalian Coalfield of Ostrau in Austrian Silesia which he made the type of a new genus Mittagia, after Herr Mittag, Director of Mines. Two sporangia, between 2 and 3 mm. in diameter, were found in close association as though belonging to a single sorus; one was empty and the other contained four megaspores. The structure of the thick wall of the sporangia is very similar to that of the testa of Lagenostoma Lomaxi, but it apparently split into two valves. Lignier refers the new type, Mittagia seminifonnis, to some unknown Palaeozoic group of heterosporous Filicineae, possibly the ancestral stock of the Pteridosperms, and he thinks it probable that the sporangia resembled seeds in their facilities for dispersal. In the structure 1 Vol. n. p. 364, fig. 270. 2 Berridge (11). 3 Lignier (13^). 64 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH, of the sporangial wall Mittagia also resembles the sporocarp of Pilularia. Seeds ^presented as impressions, without internal structure, superficially resembling Lagenostoma. Lagenospermum Nathorst. This generic name is adopted for seeds represented by casts or impressions agreeing in external features with Lagenostoma but which on the available evidence cannot be confidently assigned to that genus ^. Two types of seed were described by Arber^ from the Lower Coal Measures of Scotland as Lagenostoma Kidstoni and L. Sinclairi: the former has been removed by Oliver^ to Physostoma and both are included by Arber^ in a recent paper in the genus Radiospermum. This new generic term is proposed by Arber for a number of small sub-cylindrical seeds founded on impressions including 'small seeds which, when the structure is preserved, are known as Jjagenostoma, Physostoma, and Conostoma.^ The question of nomenclature is invariably raised by cases in which impressions resemble in their superficial characters genera founded on anatomical characters: the seeds originally referred to Lageyiostoma Sinclairi afford a good example of this difficulty. Nathorst has recently proposed the generic name Lagenospermum as preferable to Lagenostoma and Radio- spermum in the case of Lagenostoma Sinclairi and similar seeds which afford no proof of the possession of such morphological characters as would justify their inclusion in the genus Lagenostoma but which may be examples of that genus. As Nathorst points out, the adoption of Radiospermum for L. Sinclairi is inadvisable on the ground that it is also applied to seeds of a different type. The type-species of Lagenospermum is L. Sinclairi and Nathorst describes additional species from Lower Carboniferous rocks in Spitzbergen. Lagenospermum Sinclairi (Arber ex Kidston ms.). Although it is not certain that these seeds are morphologically identical with the genus Lagenostoma, sl brief description is inter- 1 Nathorst (14) p. 29. 2 Arber (05). 3 OUver (09). * Arber (14) p. 102. I XXIX] LAGENOSPERMUM 65 calated here as the habit of the seed-bearing axes supplies a probable key to the habit of the fertile fronds of Lyginopteris. The type-specimens were collected by Mr Sinclair from the Lower Coal Measures of Ayrshire, Scotland, and recorded by Kidston as Lagenostoma sp. : they were afterwards named by him in manu- script L. Sinclairi and handed to Dr Arber for description. The seeds are elliptical-oblong, 4-5-5 x 1-5-3 mm., radially symmetrical and enclosed by a loose envelope which is longitudinally ribbed and divided distally into several linear-lanceolate lobes (fig. 408, A, A'). This covering, though much longer than the cupule of Lagenostoma Lomaxi, is probably a homologous structure. The most interesting point is the attachment of the seeds to slender branches of a compound axis (fig. 408, A). It is probable that the seeds were borne on a frond characterised by the reduction or complete abortion of the sterile lamina or perhaps, as in the recent Fern Thyrsopteris elegans'^, some of the pinnae of a large compound frond were fertile. It is worthy of note that Arber recognised pinnules of Sphenopteris obtusiloba^ in association with L. Sinclairi,. a fact, as he says, in itself of no value but which acquires signifi- cance in view of the discovery by Carpentier^ of cupules in close proximity to the same species of frond. Specimens described by Dr Stopes from Westphalian rocks of New Brunswick as Pteri- spermostrohus hifurcatus^ bear a close resemblance to L. Sinclairi. Lagenospermum ohlongum (Kidston). The species recently described by Dr Kidston^ as Lagenostoma ohlonga from the South Staffordshire coal-field appears to be closely allied to Arber's L. Sinclairi: it is represented by pairs of seeds borne at the ends of forked branchlets : the seed is 2-5 mm. long by 1-5 mm. broad and is surrounded by a longer oblong cupule divided distally into 6 free lobes. A larger type of seed, 3 cm. long and 2-5 cm. broad, is described by Kidston^ from the same coal-field as Lagenostomal urceolaris. A characteristic feature is the truncate apex surrounded by a prominent canopy formed of the expanded apical free portion of 1 Vol. II. pp. 294, 295. • 2 Vol. 11. p. 529, fig. 352. ^ Carpentier (11) p. 3. * See page 66. 5 Kidston (14) p. 160, PI. vn. figs. 1, 2. « Ibid. p. 161, PL XVI. figs. 9, 10. 66 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. the integument. The lack of anatomical data in both these seeds is a reason for the substitution of some less committal term than Lagenostoma. Grand'Euryi and Carpentier^ have published accounts of impressions of seeds from the Coal Measures of France compared by them with species of Lagenostoma though not assigned to new species. These and similar seeds should be referred to Nathorst's genus Lagenospermum. The difficulty of recognising the true nature of seed-like impressions is illustrated by some specimens in the Goldenberg collection in Stockholm described by Arber^ as Carpolithus Nathorsti : these consist of pieces of Sphenopteris pinnae probably, as Zeiller suggested, Sphenopteris Schaumburg-Lippeana (Stur) bearing at the ends of the segments of deeply divided pinnules what appeared to be seeds 1 mm. long, oval and longitudinally ribbed, and possibly enclosed in a cupule. Arber considered the 'seeds' to be related to Lagenostoma, probably belonging to some member of the Lyginopterideae. An examination of the specimens by Nathorst* showed that the supposed seeds are collections of spores; but whether the spores of a true Fern or the microspores of a Pteridosperm cannot be determined. Pterispermostrobus Stopes. Pterispermostrobus bifurcatus Stopes. Dr Stopes^ has recently called attention to a resemblance between specimens from the Westphalian of New Brunswick, described by her as Pterispermostrobus bifurcatus, and Lageno- spermum Sinclairi. The New Brunswick fossil is made the type of a new genus Pterispermostrobus, which is employed for fructi- fications of Pteridosperms that cannot be associated with a known species of parent and may be either seeds or complex male organs borne on a definitely branched rachis. The type-species is repre- sented by a slender axis bearing lateral branches divided into two widely divergent arms each of which bears a terminal body, 1 Grand 'Eury (05^) B. ^ Carpentier (11). 3 Arber, E. A. N. (08). * Nathorst (08) p. 10, PI. ii. figs. 19—21. 5 Stopes (14) p. 74, Pis. xvii. fig. 45, xxv. fig. 69, text-fig. 15. XXIX] PTERISPERMOSTROBUS 67 4x3 mm., characterised by 3 — 5 apical lobes extending 2 mm. beyond the distal end of the seed-Uke organ and resembling a cupule. In this as in many other cases it is impossible to determine the true nature of the reproductive bodies, whether they are small seeds or groups of microsporangia : the new generic name serves a useful purpose though it is not always possible definitely to refer doubtful fructifications of this kind to a Pteridosperm. The organs in question may also be compared with Codonotheca?-. Pterisfermostrohiis pusillus (Nathorst). The name, Codonotheca pusilla, is given by Nathorst^ to some •doubtful specimens from the Culm of Spitzbergen representing short stalks bearing linear-lanceolate scale-Hke bodies, 9 — 10 mm. long by 1 mm. broad, coalescent at the base. Nathorst compares them with Sellard's species, Codonotheca caduca, but adds that they may be cupules of some Pteridosperm and calls attention to their resemblance to some fossils figured by Carpentier as Calymmatotheca acuta. Both Nathorst's species and the French specimens described by Carpentier^ as cupules may be referred to Dr Stopes' genus Pterispermostrobus as their morphological nature cannot be determined. V. Roots. In 1876 Williamson* described some petrified vegetative organs from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire under the name Kaloxylon Hooheri characterised by a division of the secondary xylem into cuneate masses (fig. 415, C) Uke those in some recent Bignoniaceous stems. Williamson at first believed Kaloxylon to be a stem, but in a later memoir he expressed the opinion that 'it is difficult to believe that these organs have been other than roots'^. Felix^ had meanwhile described a specimen from the Coal Measures of Westphalia as Kaloxylon cf. Hookeri and suggested that it might be a waterplant. In 1894 Williamson and Scott ^ demonstrated that Kaloxylon Hookeri is the root of Lyginopteris, a conclusion independently reached by Hick^. 1 See page 124. 2 Nathorst (14) p. 23, PI. xv. fig. 43. 3 Carpentier (13) p. 391. * WilUamson (76) B. ^ Williamson (87) p. 297, « Felix (86) A. p. 51. ' WiUiamson and Scott (94). » Hick (95) p. 1 14. 5—2 68 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. The roots of Lyginopteris arise on all sides of the radially sym- metrical stem in the pericycle region ; they are copiously branched as is shown by the abundance of roots of various sizes in close association. No roots have been discovered exceeding 1 cm. in diameter nor have any been recorded with secondary periderm- tissue. The absence of root-hairs and the more or less lacunar structure of the cortex are indicative of swampy ground. It is seldom that the palaeobotanist has an opportunity of investi- gating the growing-points of Palaeozoic plants, and for this reason some well-preserved apices of Lyginopteris roots, attributed to that genus on the ground of constant association with fragments of stems in the calcareous nodules of Dulesgate, are of special interest. One of these specimens was figured by Dr Stopes and Mr Watson^ in their account of plant-bearing nodules, and a de- scription of that and other examples has since been published by Prof. Weiss^. A longitudinal section of a root-tip, -21 mm. in diameter at its broadest part, shows a root-cap which suggests an origin from a single cell, but an examination of the plerome- cylinder in a slightly tangential section does not afford conclusive evidence of the occurrence of a single initial cell. Weiss on the whole inclines to the view that Lyginopteris possessed a single apical cell like the roots of Leptosporangiate Ferns, though he prefers to leave the decision open. Attention is drawn to the fact that the plate of tracheidal tissue in emerging lateral rootlets is vertical as in Phanerogams and not horizontal as in recent Pteridophyta. The vascular tissue of a Lyginopteris root (fig. 410) consists of from three to eight alternate strands of centripetal xylem and phloem, and with the metaxylem is associated a small amount of conjunctive parenchyma which does not form a central pith. The pericycle, one to several layers broad, is succeeded by an endodermis which occasionally shows the characteristic thickenings on the radial walls. A broad cortex of thin- walled lacunar tissue with numerous secretory cells is bounded externally by a super- ficial cylinder of two or more layers of comparatively large and thin cells, the outermost of which are radially elongated. This 1 Slopes and Watson (08) PI. xvii. fig. 1. 2 Weiss, F. E. (13). XXIX] LYGINOPTERIS 69 superficial tissue forms a striking feature by which a Lyginopteris root may often be recognised at a glance. The root represented in fig. 410, approximately 2 mm. in diameter, has a heptarch stele divided into seven xylem-groups by crushed bands of parenchyma and a protoxylem strand occupies the apex of each projecting angle (fig. 410, fx). The superficial cylinder of clear cells is seen at a. A very small root is seen at r in fig. 410. r Fig. 410. Lyginopteris oldhamia, young root, x 30. (Kidston Coll. 403.) Fig. 415, C, represents part of an older root in which the pent- arch primary xylem is enclosed by broad wedge-like groups of secondary xylem and phloem separated by conspicuous medullary rays opposite the protoxylem strands (px). Crushed primary phloem arcs, p, are often clearly recognisable beyond the cambium. The secondary thickening, as Williamson and Scott state, 'takes place exactly in the manner typical of roots of Dicotyledons, so that this fossil might very well be used for purposes of demon- stration as illustrating the secondary growth of a root with diagrammatic clearness'^. The young roots of Lyginopteris resemble in many respects those of Marattiaceous Ferns, though the presence of a single apical cell, if such occurs, is a distinguishing 1 Williamson and Scott (95) p. 739. 70 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH, feature ; but in the presence of secondary conducting tissue they agree with those of Phanerogams. Distribution of Lyginopteris. The frequency with which petrified fragments of Lyginopteris stems occur in the calcare.ous nodules of the EngHsh coal seams shows that the genus must have been plentifully represented in the Upper Carboniferous vegetation, and the occurrence in both North American^ and European localities of fronds identical with or closely resembling Sphenopteris Hoeninghausi affords evidence of wide geographical range. Petrified specimens were recorded by Felix^ from Westphalia in 1886, and Zalessky^ has recently discovered Lyginopteris in the Donetz coal-basin of Kussia. An investigation by Kubart* of the calcareous nodules, to which attention was first drawn by Stur, in the Ostrau Coal Measures led to the discovery of several examples of Lyginopteris stems. The descriptions and figures so far published are hardly sufficient to enable us to estimate the degree of relationship to the English type, but some of the stems appear to be new species and Kubart considers them all to be specifically distinct from Lyginopteris oldhamia. Lyginopteris heterangioides contains scattered tracheids in the pith and thus affords an interesting transitional type between Lyginopteris and Heterangium. In L. lacunosum the inner cortex is lacunar and the primary xylem bundles pursue an independent course in the stele in contrast to the anastomosing arrangement in L. oldhmnia and in another Hungarian species L. tristichum. The species recorded by Kubart occur in the Millstone grit and the Coal Measures. The geological range of Lyginopteris as represented by petrified stems does not extend beyond the limits of the Carboniferous system. HETERANGIUM. The generic name Heterangium was first used by Corda^ for a piece of stem from the Coal Measures of Kadnitz, Bohemia, represented by part of the vascular axis of a stem consisting 1 White (99) B. p. 40. ^ j^elix (86) A. 3 Zalessky (10). ^ Kubart (14); (11). 5 Corda (45) A. PI. xvi. XXIX] HETERANGIUM 71 of strands of large reticulately pitted tracheids intermixed with parenchyma and exhibiting structural features differing apparently from those of any known type. Corda's material has been re-examined by Kubart^ who figures a section from it. Heteran- giiim is a genus closely allied to Lyginopteris both in habit and in general anatomical characters. The stem is monostelic; the vascular cylinder prior to secondary thickening resembles the protostele of certain recent species of Gleichenia and may be com- pared also with Trichomanes scandens^. It agrees with that of Lyginopteris in the possession of primary mesarch bundles but differs in the substitution of a cauhne axial mass of metaxylem for the pith of Lyginopteris. The secondary vascular tissue agrees closely with that of recent Cycads and Lyginopteris. A character- istic feature is the occurrence of numerous horizontal bands of sclerous cells in the cortex (fig. 412) of the stem and in the ground- tissue of the rachis and larger branches of the fronds. The stem was erect and rarely branched ' giving off large foliar appendages at somewhat distant intervals and from its entire circumference'^. Our knowledge of the reproductive organs is less precise than in the case of Lyginopteris; but we are justified in asserting that Heterangium is a Pteridosperm which in all probability bore fern- like microsporangia and seeds similar in general plan to Lageno- stoma. The association of some seeds included in Williamson's genus Conostoma with Heterangium Grievii in the Petty cur beds and their resemblance to Lagenostoma, the seed of Lyginopteris, suggested the possibility of actual connexion: further evidence in support of this view has recently been brought forward by Dr Benson* in the case of a species of Conostonia which she transfers to a new genus Sphaerostoma. The two species Heterangium Grievii and H. tiliaeoides are described in illustration of the genus and reference is made to a few other types. 1 Kubart (08) fig. 3. 2 Vol. II. p. 310, fig. 237, C; p. 311, fig. 238. 3 Williamson (73) A. p. 403. * Benson (14). 72 PTERIDOSPERMEAE ~ [CH. Heterangium Grievii Williamson. (Stem.). 1872. Dictyoxylon Grievii, Williamson, Brit. Ass. Rep. (Edinburgh Meeting), p. 112. 1873. Heterangium Grievii, Williamson, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Vol. 162, p. 404. [Leaf.) [1720. Fumaria officinalis, Volkmann, Silesia subterranea, p. Ill, PL xiv. fig. 2.] 1822. Filicites (Sphenopteris) elegans, Brongniart, Class. Veg. p. 233. 1828. Sphenopteris elegans, Brongniart, Hist, Veg. Foss. p. 172. 1836. Cheilanthites elegans, Goeppert, Foss. Farnkr. p. 233. 1877. Diplothmema elegans, Stur, Culm Flora, ii. p. 130. i. Stem. At the Edinburgh meeting of the British Association William- son^ gave a brief account of some petrified stems from the Lower Carboniferous strata of Burntisland on the Firth of Forth which he included in the genus Dictyoxylon. One of these was named D. Grievii after Mr Grieve the discoverer of the specimens. In a later and more complete description Williamson adopted Corda's generic name on the ground of the close resemblance of the Scotch stem to the Bohemian fragment Heterangium paradoxum. In 1873 2 Williamson added new facts in regard to H. Grievii and in 1890^ he described a very closely allied type from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire. Five years later his descriptions were considerably extended and modified in the joint memoir with Dr Scott*. The great difference in age between the English Upper Car- boniferous stem and the Scotch specimens from the Lower Carboniferous beds of Burntisland suggests a probable specific difference. Dr Scott has recently adopted the name Heterangium Lomaxij proposed but not published by Williamson, for the English type. Though in the following account the species Heterangium Grievii is treated in the broader sense it should be recognised that the geologically younger stem is worthy of specific recognition; it is characterised, to quote Scott^, by 'the great distinctness of the primary xylem strands, by their nearly exarch structure, 1 Williamson (722). 2 WiUiamson (73) A. ^ WilHamson (90). 4 Williamson and Scott (95). ^ Scott (15). xxix] HETERANGIUM 73 with little primary centrifugal wood, by the abundant secretory sacs of the stele, and by the rather scattered leaves.' Heterangium Grievii has a radially symmetrical stem bearing compound leaves with decurrent petioles which give to the other- wise cylindrical axis an angular outline as seen in transverse section (fig. 411, A). The phyllo taxis appears to be |. The / Fig. 411. Heterangium Grievii. It, a, b, c, leaf -traces ; p, pericycle with periderm; ph, phloem; x^, x~, primary and secondary xylem; px, protoxylem; r, root; s, sclerous tissue. stem rarely exceeds 1-5 cm. in diameter: in the centre is a com- paratively large stele consisting in young stems of primary xylem and phloem, but in older stems these are separated by a cylinder of secondary vascular tissue which in this species is always narrower than in Lyginopteris oldhamia and, as Williamson pointed out, often of unequal thickness on different radii. The medullated stele 74 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. of Lyginofteris is replaced by a solid xylem-cylinder consisting mainly of groups of large tracheids, reaching -3 mm. in diameter^ with multiseriate bordered pits (fig. 411, D) embedded in an anastomosing parenchymatous tissue-system. In the stele repro- duced in fig. 411, B, which with the exception of a very narrow zone of secondary xylem, x^, consists entirely of primary xylem, x^, the parenchyma is represented by a darker reticulum (cf. fig. 415, B) dividing the metaxylem into islands as in Gleichenia, In the peripheral portion of the xylem the tracheids are rather narrower and arranged in more definite groups in many of which is a single strand of narrow spiral elements (fig. 411, A', px) close to the outer margin. These peripheral primary bundles in which protoxylem is recognisable may be described as leaf-traces of mesarch structure consisting of centripetal xylem and, to a much less extent, of smaller centrifugal elements for the most part with dense spiral bands in place of the multiseriate pits of the rest of the metaxylem. The structure of these leaf-traces is practically identical with that of the primary bundles of Lyginopteris. There is, however, a difference to which attention is drawn by Williamson and Scott. While in Lyginopteris in any transverse section the primary bundles in the stele are equal in number to the leaf- traces in the pericycle and cortex, in Heterangium the peripheral groups in the stele may be as many as twenty, a number consider- ably in excess of the leaf-traces beyond the limits of the primary xylem of the stele. It may be that the leaf-trace of each leaf, which joins the stele at a distance of 6 — 10 internodes below its entrance into the cortex from the leaf-stalk, may branch in its descent in the axial region, or some of the primary groups of xylem may be confined to the axial region and independent of the leaf-traces. Portions of the peripheral region of the stele may be occupied by metaxylem groups without protoxylem and identical with those which make up the bulk of the metaxylem. Scott^ has recently published a note in which he states that most of the British Coal Measures Heterangiums were polydesmic. Two bundles, and not a single strand as in the Scotch H. Grievii, leave the stele for each leaf, and these divide into four, in some cases at least, before entering the petiole. 1 Scott (15). XXIX] HETERANGIUM 75 The secondary xylem is continuous at its inner edge with the outermost primary tracheids (fig. 411, A') and consists of rows of tracheids, 1 — 3 elements broad, alternating with numerous broad medullary rays of radially elongated parenchyma. Beyond a typical cambium-zone the secondary phloem consists of parenchyma and sieve-tubes bounded by crushed arcs of primary phloem. Abutting on the phloem is a pericycle composed of several layers of small parenchymatous cells (fig. 411, A, f) and in the outer layers of this tissue a phellogen (fig. 411, C, p) and some periderm are usually present though, as Williamson and Scott point out, the periderm is less regular and narrower than in Lyginopteris. The inner cortex, composed of short parenchymatous cells, is traversed by numerous narrow bands of dark, thick-walled cells similar in the structure of the elements, though peculiar in the horizontal elongation of the groups, to the sclerous nests in the pericycle and pith of Lyginopteris. These characteristic bands are chiefly seen in the oblique longitudinal section of a stem represented in fig. 412. In this section, 25 mm. in length, the lighter band, p, is the pericycle and in it a few obliquely cut leaf- traces are shown as dark patches. The horizontal bands are similar in structure and shape to the diaphragms of thick cells in the pith of Abies magnificat, and in both plants they probably serve as supports to the softer parenchyma. There may be as many as 46 bands in a vertical length of cortex of 1 inch (about 19 per centimetre). It was the occurrence of precisely similar transverse lines on the carbonised impressions of the rachis of Sphenopteris elegans that led Kidston^ to suggest a connexion between that species and the stem of Heterangium Grievii. The outer cortex, consisting of alternate strands of parenchyma and stereome similar to that of Lyginopteris, is much narrower and a less conspicuous feature than in Heterangium; the stereome bands do not form so regular a hypodermal network and extend much further vertically without anastomosing. The epidermis has been described as a layer of fairly thick cells showing in one case an appearance of a depressed stoma^. There are no secretory canals like those of Cycads but, as in Lyginopteris, scattered cells 1 Jeffrey (05) PL m. fig. 21. 2 Kidston {9V) B. p. 49. 3 WiUiamson and Scott (95) p. 753. 76 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. with dark contents in the stem-tissues probably represent secretory sacs. The leaf-traces on leaving the stele pursue a very gradually ascending course to the petiole; they retain their collateral structure in the pericycle and cortex and have no secondary xylem, but become concentric as they enter the base of a leaf. Fig. 412. Heterangium Grievii. Oblique longitudinal section of stele and part of cortex; p, pericycle. x 3. (Kidston Coll. 529.) Before passing to the description of the leaves, the more striking features in the stem may be summarised with reference to the diagrammatic sketches shown in fig. 411. Fig. 411, A, represents a section of Heterangium Grievii approximately 2 cm. in its maximum diameter; at the periphery of the primary xylem, x^, and close to its outer margin are several protoxylem groups, not shown in the drawing, each of which marks the position of a mesarch trace. The zone of secondary xylem, x^, is interrupted by the exit of leaf -traces and one of these is seen at a in fig. 415, A, separated from the central primary xylem by a foliar gap filled with parenchyma. The pericycle is shown at p in fig. 412 and XXIX] HETERAXGIUM 77 its outer boundary at f in fig. 411, A. Beyond the pericycle is the broad parenchymatous cortex with leaf-traces, It, and some sclerenchymatous patches, s. The vascular strand a is passing into the base of a leaf-stalk. In the stem shown in fig. 411, B, 1-4 cm. X 7 mm., a decurrent petiole is seen at the upper end with its single vascular strand, a, and two sclerous nests; a similar though detached leaf-base occurs at the opposite end of the long diameter. Other leaf-traces are seen at h and c. From the left-hand side of the stele a curved strand of tracheids is passing out to supply a root, r. ii. Root. Adventitious roots of endogenous origin are occasionally met with in Heterangium stems, but we have less information as to their anatomy than in the case of Lyginopteris. In a specimen of Heterangium Lomaxi figured by Williamson and Scott^ three roots are seen in a vertical series growing outwards through the cortex of a stem. The roots agree generally with those of Lyginopteris but the outermost cortical layers possess no special features. iii. Leaf. The large compound fronds long known as Sphenopteris elegans were recognised by Kjdston as the leaves of Heterangium by the closely arranged transverse striae or narrow ribs on the rachis and pinnae which are the expression on the carbonised impressions of the horizontal plates of sclerous tissue in the petrified stems and petioles of Heterangium. The dichotomously branched fronds are included by Stur in his genus Diplotmema and that author figures several typical examples in his ' Culm Flora '2. Fig. 413, A, shows a forked axis with the bases of more slender branches and the characteristic transverse bands and in fig. 413, B part of a pinna is reproduced. In general appearance, except in the bifurcating pinnae, the fronds resemble those of Davallia tenuifolia with which Brongniart compared the Palaeozoic species. There is little doubt that Sphenopteris dissecta and some other species were also borne on Heterangium stems. The rachis and petioles 1 Williamson and Scott (95) PI. xxvn. fig. 28. 2 Stur (77) p. 236, Pis. xm. xiv. 78 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. differ from those of Lyginopteris fronds in the absence of emergences (cf. fig. 404, E). The petioles (fig. 411, B, a) have a single con- centric vascular bundle with internal protoxylem. ^ ^ B? Fig. 413. Sphenopteris (Diplotmema) elegans. A. Forked rachis with bases of lateral branches (Kidston Coll.); B, pinna. (After Stur.) IV. Reproductive organs. As yet no satisfactory evidence has been published with regard to the nature of the microsporangia but in all probability these were constructed on the same plan as those of Lyginopteris. There is a strong prima facie case for assigning the seed Sphaero- stoma to Heterangium: absolute proof of organic connexion is still lacking though Dr Benson's recent account of the seeds xxix] SPHAEROSTOMA 79 associated with Heterangium Grievii almost amounts to demon- stration of continuity between vegetative organs and seeds. Sphaerostoma ovale (Williamson). In 1877 Williamson described some detached petrified seeds from the Lower Carboniferous rocks of Fifeshire, Scotland, as Conostoma ovale and C. intermedium. Dr Benson's investigation^ of these two forms leads her to confirm Williamson's doubts as to the validity of a specific separation and she assigns the single Tig. 414. Sphaerostoma ovale. A. Longitudinal section showing the cupule, c, integument, e, f, with vascular bundle, v, the upper part of the nuceUus, n, and megaspore, m; a, archegonia. B. Transverse section through the roof of the pollen-chamber, pc, and the summit of the nucellus, n. (After Benson.) type to the new genus Sphaerostoma. The seeds are always associated with the vegetative organs of Heterangium Grievii. In 1909 Oliver^ expressed the opinion that the Burntisland species of Conostoma (= Sphaerostoma) is probably the seed of Heterangium. The seed consists of a central body representing the nucellus, an inner integument, and an enveloping cupule or outer integument : most specimens have lost the cupule and in this condition they ^re 3-5 mm. long with a maximum breadth of 2-2 mm. In the Benson (14). OUver (09) p. 111. 80 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH. middle the seed is circular in transverse section and octagonal near the base and apex. The free apical part of the integument forms a frill (canopy) round the micropyle and extends beyond the nucellar apex which consists of a relatively flat plinth sur- mounted by a central dome or lagenostome (fig. 414). The lagenostome is surrounded by an annular pollen-chamber on to the lower surface of which abuts the large embryo-sac, and remains of archegonia were noticed below the pollen-chamber. The roof of the chamber in the young state consists of a layer of thin-walled cells extending across the flattened apex of the nucellus, n, but as the pollen-chamber becomes differentiated from the nucellar tissue by the disorganisation of the zone of cells its roof-cells thicken their vertical walls and assume the structure of a multiseriate annulus, which acts as a mechanism for opening the pollen-chamber by a circular dehiscence in such a way that the edge of the ruptured roof of the pollen-chamber slightly overlaps the periphery of the central column of nucellar tissue after it has returned to its original position subsequent to the entrance of the microspores. The micropylar region is sur- rounded by eight lobes of the integument and each is characterised by a crest of radially elongated cells, fig. 414,/, especially promi- nent on the outer side. External to this is the slightly longer cupular sheath (fig. 414, c) which may also have been lobed. The surface of the integument below the terminal crests consists of a layer of cells with small papillae which eventually ruptured and discharged mucilage. Both integuments have a vascular supply, that of the inner integument being represented by eight vascular bundles, some of which were found to have mesarch xylem, given off from the single strand in the pedicel. Fig. 414 shows the apical region of a seed of Sphaerostoma : the flat-topped nucellar cap, n, is surrounded by the annular pollen-chamber, pc^ below which are indicated the archegonia : the wall of the mega- spore (embryo-sac) is seen at m and external to this vascular bundles, v, run up the inner portion of the integument accom- panied by some large cells (aqueous tissue). The elongated epidermal cells at the apices of the lobes of the integument form the frill, /, and at a lower level the cells of the same layer are much smaller and papillate (e) : the outer integument, c, forms the XXIX] HETERANGIUM 81 so-called cupule. The transverse section shown in fig. 414, B, is taken at the level of the roof of the pollen-chamber and of the nucellar cap ; it illustrates the contrast between the ' multi- seriate annulus' and the central column of small parenchyma. Sphaerostoma differs from Lagenostoma in the whorl of crests around the micropyle, in the nearly hemispherical form of the lagenostome and in the relatively wider pollen-chamber with its peculiar form of dehiscence. Miss Benson, while regarding Sphaerostomu as similar to Lagenostoma in general plan, believes the distinguishing features of the former to be such as are con- sistent with a more primitive form. An important argument in support of connecting this seed with Heterangium is derived from the juxtaposition of some seeds and portions of Heterangium petioles, a juxtaposition that is believed to demonstrate original continuity. Grand' Euryi has recorded the association of two species of leaves, Sphenopteris elegans and S. dissecta, with small seeds compared by him with Lagenostoma. In the absence of petrified specimens it w^ould be practically impossible to distinguish between Lagenostoma and Conostoma or Sphaerostoma. Carpentier^ has described some impressions from French Westphalian beds as Conostoma and he records cupules without seeds on fronds of Sphenopteris ohtusifolia which he speaks of as having transverse stria tions hke those of Heterangium. Dr Kidston pointed out to me that the surface-features of the Sphenopteris rachis are probably due to ramental scales and not to the presence of horizontal sclerous bands. Carpentier's seeds may be compared with Lagenospermum Sinclairi. Heterangium tiliaeoides Wilhamson, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Vol. 178, p. 289. This species, founded by Wilhamson on material from the Lower Coal Measures of Hahfax, Yorkshire, while agreeing in the structure of the primary stele and in the general features of the cortex with the older Heterangium Grievii, is clearly dis- tinguished by certain well-marked characters. Sclerous groups occur in the inner cortex as in H. Grievii but they are present also 1 Grand 'Eury (052). 2 Carpentier (11) PI. xii. fig. 1. s. Ill 6 82 PTEllID OSPERME AE [CH. a Fig. 415. A, B, Heterangium. A, H. Grievii, a, leaf-traces. B, H. tiliaeoides. C, root of Lyginopteris. (A, B, Kidston CoU., 529, 294; C, Williamson Coll., 1631.) XXIX] HETERANGIUM 83 in the pericycle. The peripheral leaf-traces in the stele show the mesarch structure rather more distinctly than in H. Grievii, and the secondary xylem, which forms a much broader cylinder than in the Scotch type, is divided by broad medullary rays into characteristic cuneate masses each of which rests at its base on the centrifugal tracheids of a leaf-trace strand of xylem (fig. 415, B). The most striking distinctive feature is afforded by the secondary phloem, which is often preserved in wonderful perfection; this is unusually thick and owing to the tangential expansion of the principal medullary rays the secondary phloem is divided into separate masses which decrease in breadth towards the external arcs of primary phloem. The triangular form of the phloem rays, composed of tangentially stretched parenchyma, suggested the specific name tiliaeoides on account of their striking resemblance to the rays of Tilia. The leaf-traces are nearly always in pairs as they pass out through the cortex ; they sub- sequently divide and appear as four vascular strands in the petiole. The portion of stem reproduced in fig. 415, B, 8 mm. broad, shows clearly the separation of the secondary xylem and phloem into wedge-shaped groups : in each group there are several narrow medullary rays. The extras telar tissues are represented by a few fragments only. Several layers of crushed periderm occur in the pericyclic region but the more external tissues have been almost completely exfoliated^. Reference has already been made to Heterangium Lomaxi, the English type originally included by Williamson in Heterangium Grievii. The provisional species Heterangium cylindricum William- son and Scott 2 differs, as Scott says, in no important respect from H. Lomaxi and should not be retained. A new species, H. mini- mum Scott^, has been founded on a very small stem from the Coal Measures of Dulesgate in which the leaf-traces leave the stele as single bundles as in the Scotch H. Grievii. The French species Heterangium Duchartrei^ Ren. from Permian rocks was originally referred by Renault to the genus Poroxylon : it is represented by little more than the xylem of the stele and 1 For a fuller description, see Williamson and Scott (95). 2 Scott (09) B. p. 410; (15). a gcott (15). * Renault (79) B. p. 276, PI. xiv. figs. 4—8; (96) A. p. 251, PI. Lxv. figs. 1, 2. 6—2 84 PTERIDOSPERMEAE [CH, bears a close resemblance to H. tiliaeoides. Heterangium punctatum Ren. and H. Renaulti^ (Brongn.) also from the Permian of France were originally placed in the genus Lycopodium and afterwards recognised as stems of Heterangium. A fourth Frjench Permian species, H. bibractense^, is peculiar in the possession of a very small primary stele encircled by deep wedges of secondary xylem^ but without more information it is impossible to speak with confidence as to its systematic position. Kubart^ has recently published brief descriptions of some stems from the Ostrauer coal-basin in Moravia all of which he regards as specifically distinct from the English types. In Heterangium Sturi the primary xylem is almost exarch and the peripheral xylem groups are not very clearly defined : in H. alatum, so called from the presence of lateral wings on the petioles, the leaf-trace strands are more sharply differentiated from the rest of the stele. H. polystichum is a similar type, and H. Andrei, with a relatively larger amount of parenchyma in the stele and thicker stems forms an additional link between Heterangium and Lyginojpteris'^. Prof. Johnson^ has described a species of Heterangium, H. hibernicum, from Upper Devonian and Lower Carboniferous beds in Co. Cork, Ireland, based on some impressions of frond fragments without any pinnules. The occurrence of numerous transverse striae on the rachis and lateral branches suggests comparison with Heterangium fronds, but an ex- amination of the specimens led me to suspect that some at least of the striae are cracks and not original features. The presence of spur-like appendages from the lower surface of the pinnae near their origin from the rachis is recorded as a peculiar character, and some obscure oval bodies, the nature of which is extremely doubtful, are considered to be seeds. The imperfection of the material hardly justifies the institution of a new species of Heterangium, Heterangium ranges from the Lower Carboniferous to the Permian strata and is thus older than Lyginopteris which in the form of petrified stems is not recorded from the Lower beds of the Carboniferous system. Heterangium has been described as 1 Renault (96) A. pp. 253, 255. 2 /j^-^, p. 252, PI. lxv. figs. 3, 6. 3 Kubart (14). * Dr Scott who has seen sections of this species tells me that it is a striking intermediate form. 5 Johnson (12). XXIX] HETERANGIUM 85 having a 'great preponderance of fern-like characters,' but having regard to the resemblance of the primary xylem of the latter to that of the Osmundaceae it would seem doubtful whether in their relation to the Ferns there is any important difference. Heterangimn may safely be spoken of as the more primitive genus. The polydesmic character of the petioles of most species is parti- cularly interesting as it brings the genus nearer to the Medulloseae and to Rhetinangium^. 1 Scott (15). CHAPTER XXX. II. MEDULLOSEAE. The term Medulloseae was first employed by Goeppert and Stenzel^ for a family of Palaeozoic plants that appears to have reached its maximum development in the Permian period: the oldest representatives so far discovered are of Upper Carboniferous age. Our knowledge of the family is chiefly derived from a study of the anatomical characters of stems, and it is therefore on this basis that any grouping of genera or species should be attempted. Although there is little information with regard to the reproductive organs of Medullosa, the type-genus, it is certain that the Medul- loseae are Pteridosperms differing from members of that group included in the Lyginopterideae in the presence of more than one stele in the stem, in the habit of the fronds, and in the structure of the rachis, as also in the structure of the seeds, though these organs bear a fairly close resemblance to the seeds of Lyginopteris and Heterangium. The fronds of the Lyginopterideae are of the Sfhenofteris type while in the case of such species of Medullosa as afford evidence of connexion between stems and leaves the latter have the characters of Neuropteris, Alethopteris, Odonto- pteris, Linopteris, and other form-genera usually included in the Neuropterideae. Dr Lotsy^ speaks of Lyginopteris and Heterangimn as members of the Sphenopteridophylla and assigns species of Medullosa either to the Neuropteridophylla or to the Pecopteridophylla, the latter subdivision including species with fronds of the Alethopteris type. There is, however, little doubt that other forms of leaves, such as Odontopteris and possibly Taeniopteris, were borne on Medullosan stems. It is undesirable 1 Goeppert and Stenzel (81). 2 Lotsy (09) p. 723. CH. XXX] MEDULLOSA 87 except in the absence of more trustworthy criteria to make use of so protean a feature as leaf-form as a basis of classification. The name Neuropterideae has been frequently employed for Pteridosperms other than the Lyginopterideae on the ground that the foliage of Medullosa is represented by species assigned to form-genera included in the Neuropterideae. It is, however, preferable to restrict the family-name Neuropterideae to fronds and to speak of the second family of Pteridosperms as the Medulloseae, including the genera Medullosa, Sutcliffia, and Rhexoxylon. MEDULLOSA. Some species of Medullosa probably resembled in habit Angio- ■pteris evecta and the larger Marattias ; they had short and relatively thick stems clothed with the large decurrent bases of long com- pound fronds superficially like those of some recent Ferns and the leaves of the Cycad Bowenia. It is probable that, as Zeiller^ has pointed out, the fronds of Medullosa and of other Pteridosperms had a greater tendency than those of true Ferns to a dichotomy of the rachis. In other types the stems reached a considerable length and leaves and branches were separated by several feet of bare stem. The large size of the leaf-stalks in proportion to the diameter of the stem as shown by such species as Medidlosa anglica and M. Leuckarti (fig. 416) suggests either a short and thick main axis or, in the case of long stems bearing scattered leaves, a plant that supported itself partially at least by a habit of growth comparable with that of tropical Aroids or other lianes. While Medullosa anglica with its contiguous leaf -bases affords an example of the first type, the occurrence of stems of a Permian species, M. stellata, 3|^ metres long without branches or leaf-scars, suggests the habit of a liane; similarly a specimen of Medullosa Leuckarti in the Chemnitz Museum bearing a few spreading petioles but little narrower than the stem and given off at a wide angle would seem to favour the view that some species were ill adapted to be mechanically self-supporting plants. The longest piece of stem that has come under my notice is a specimen of M. stellata in the Chemnitz Museum reaching a length of nearly 8 metres: some species attained a diameter of about 50 centimetres. 1 ZeiUer (05) B. p. 725. 88 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. Medullosa is always polystelic : the plan of the vascular system varies considerably as regards both the number and form of the steles, but there is a uniform type of structure within the limits of each stele that recalls the single stele of Heterangium. The steles consist of a central region composed of primary xylem, originally surrounded by phloem, which in its mesarch or exarch structure agrees with the vascular tissue of some species of Gleichenia or Lygodium. To this central region a cambium added secondary xylem and phloem either in the form of a cylinder of uniform breadth, or more frequently the centrifugally developed xylem exceeded in amount the secondary conducting tissue added to the inner side of the primary region. Apart from anatomical details a MeduUosan stem with its several steles, each with secondary tissue, embedded in parenchymatous ground-tissue resembles the stems of some Dicotyledonous climbers such as Thinouia scandens, species of Serjania and Paullinia^. xlnatomically the main features of the stelar system of Medul- losa, neglecting the secondary xylem and phloem, are in closer agreement with the stems of Ferns than with those of any other plants. It has been shown that the genus Heterangium bears a close resemblance to Gleichenia in the structure of the primary stele (fig. 418, C) : one of the oldest types of Medullosa, M. anglica, may be described as a Heterangimn with three steles and may be compared with a dictyostelic Fern in which the irregular vascular framework is made up of three main strands. In certain types of Medullosa (fig. 416) the ground-plan of the vascular system recalls that of a solenostelic Fern, while in others the greater complexity suggests comparison with such Ferns as Matonia, Angiofteris, Psaronius, or Cyathea; *it is as though Nature were at the Carboniferous moment in the midst of a series of amazing engineering experiments, most of which were either buried deep in Palaeozoic oblivion, or permitted to survive only as vestigial relics and atavistic ghosts' 2. Though many Medullosae resemble Ferns there is an important difference between the two groups in the origin of the various plans of Medullosan stelar systems: in Ferns the leaf is the determining factor in the evolution of stelar arrangement, while in Medullosa the occasional interruption 1 Schenck (93) B. Pis. i— v, etc. 2 white, D. (05^) B. p. 389. XXX] MEDULLOSA 89 of a solenostele or the development of an apparently complex dictyostele are features independent of the leaf and leaf-traces. In the structure of the secondary xylem and phloem and in root- structure Medullosa agrees with recent Cycads. The genus is in short a generalised type with filicinean and cycadean affinities. In the possession of seeds borne on modified pinnae of compound fronds, Medullosa resembles both Cycas and the Lyginopterideae. The seeds exhibit a fairly close agreement with those of Lygino- pteris, Heterangium and recent Cycads, but they appear to have advanced further towards the cycadean type than is the case with the closely related seeds of the Lyginopterideae. The microsporophylls are very imperfectly known but they were undoubtedly much less advanced and more fern-like than the megasporophylls. The genus Medullosa is recorded from the Permian strata of Saxony, France, and Bohemia^; also from the Coal Measures of England, and the discovery of petrified petioles of Myeloxylon, the type borne on Medullosan stems in European species, may be taken as evidence of the existence of the genus in North America during the Carboniferous period^. The name Medullosa was applied by Cotta^ to three types, Medullosa elegans, M. stellata, and M. porosa, from the Roth- liegende of the Chemnitz district. The first of these was recognised by Brongniart* as a distinct genus for which he proposed the designation Myeloxylon and this was afterwards identified by Renault, Williamson, and other palaeobotanists as a petiole and not a stem. Further reference is made to Myeloxylon on a later page. Cotta spoke of Medullosa as the most puzzling of the genera dealt with in his 'Dendrolithen,' and in spite of the many additions to our knowledge the position of this Palaeozoic genus is still a fertile source of speculation. The generic designation Medullosa is applied to stems, with or without petioles ; petioles or rachises of fronds that frequently occur apart from stems are referred to the genus Myeloxylon. The leaves of Medullosa include several well-known species of Carboniferous and Permian genera such as Alethopteris, Neuropteris and others that have in 1 Solms-Laubach (97) PL vi. fig. 3. ^ Penhallow (97). Cotta (32) B. p. 59. « Brongniart (49) A. p. 57. 90 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. recent years been transferred from the Filicales to the Pterido- sperms. In a few instances seeds have been found in organic connexion with Medullosean foliage, and there can be no reasonable doubt that Trigonocarpus, some forms of Rhabdocarpus, Pachytestay and other seeds represent the integumented megasporangia of Medullosa or some closely allied genus. Before attempting to summarise the salient features of Medullosa a description of a few selected types will serve to place us in a better position to consider the genus as a whole. The British species are placed first on the ground that they are both geologically the oldest though, historically, the most recently described, representatives of the genus; and in the organisation of the stem they are simpler than the continental species. Their resemblance to Heterangium serves to some extent to bridge the gap between the majority of species of Medullosa and the simpler types of Pteridosperms represented by Heterangium and Lygino- fteris. Medullosa anglica Scott^. Prior to the discovery of this species the genus Medullosa had not been recorded from Britain. A section in the Williamson collection recognised by Scott as that of a Medullosa had been identified by Williamson as a large Heterangium stem. An undescribed specimen was found by Arber^ in the Binney collection at Cambridge which afforded some additional information as to the structure of the roots. The specimens on which Scott's thorough description is based were obtained by Messrs Wilde and Lomax from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire. The stem of this oldest species has the habit of a tree-fern and is almost completely invested by the stout decurrent bases of the petioles of large spirally disposed compound fronds with a phyllotaxis of |, the leaves of the same orthostichy being separated from one another by a vertical distance of approximately 10 cm. A transverse section of a slightly flattened stem is shown in fig. 416, A, the bases of three petioles give to it an angular form. Its dimensions are approximately 10 x 4 cm. The ground- tissue 1 Scott (99). 2 Arber, E. A. N. (03). XXX] MEDULLOSA 91 of two of the petioles is continuous with that of the stem, while that of the third leaf-stalk is cut through near its separation from the stem and its adaxial face is already defined by a hypodermal band of stereome, d. The surface of the stem is characterised by fine longitudinal ribs caused by the slightly projecting stereome in the outer cortex, and from the narrow furrows between the leaf-bases adventitious roots emerge in vertical series. The position of an interfoliar furrow is shown by a small arrow in fig. 416, A. There are three steles, 2-3 cm. x 6-10 mm. in diameter: each agrees very closely in structure with the single stele of Heterangium. MeduUosa anglica may be described as a polystelic Heterangium and as having the same relation to Heterangium as regards the stelar system as Primula auricula bears to the monostehc Primula. The central core of the stele (the black patches in the diagram, fig. 416, A) consists of an anastomosing system of tracheal groups embedded in an irregular parenchymatous reticulum. The large primary tracheids reach a diameter of 150 /x and have multiseriate pitting : at the periphery of the primary xylem there is a more definite grouping of tracheids as in Heterangium, and the slightly internal (mesarch) protoxylem elements are associated with scalariform and densely spiral tracheids (fig. 416, B, C) narrower than the more internal reticulate elements. The secondary xylem is manoxylic as in Cycads, tracheids in 2-4 radial series alternating with medullary rays 1-3 cells broad and usually of considerable depth (fig. 416, B). The principal rays are continuous with the parenchymatous matrix of the central core. Thick-walled tubular elements, no doubt of the nature of sieve-tubes, form a conspicuous feature in the phloem. The three steles occasionally divide and fuse with one another. The tissue between the steles is crushed and disorganised and in the living plant was probably small in amount. In the imper- fectly preserved inner cortical region there is a sinuous band of secondary parenchyma (periderm; fig. 416, A, c) developed from a deep-seated phellogen; in older stems this formed the super- ficial tissue after the fall of the leaves. There is no definite boundary between the cortex of the stem and the petiole-bases except when the hypoderm cuts across the cortex preparatory to Fig. 416. Medullosa stems. A — C, Medullosa anglica; A, transverse section; a, accessory vascular strand; b, accessory strand enclosed by periderm; c, band of periderm encircling steles ; d, sclerenchyma between leaf and stem. B and C, longitudinal sections. (After Scott.) D, Medullosa stellata; a, star- rings; p, 'partial pith.' (After Weber and Sterzel.) E, Medullosa Solmsi. (After Weber and Sterzel.) F, Medullosa stellata, from a specimen in the British Museum (No. 13767). G, Medullosa stellata var. cortica; v, leaf- bundles. (After Weber and Sterzel.) H, I, Medullosa Leuckarti. (After Weber and Sterzel and Solms-Laubach.) K, Medullosa stellata var. gigantea; a, con- centric stele ; b, b, later cylinders of centrifugal tissue. (Adapted from Weber and Sterzel.) L, Medullosa Solmsi var. lignosa, M, Medullosa porosa. (L, M, after Weber and Sterzel.) CH. XXX] MEDULLOSA 93 the separation of a leaf-stalk. The stem-cortex and the ground- tissue of the petioles consist of parenchyma with numerous secretory canals, not sacs only as in Heterangium, and are abundantly supplied with scattered vascular bundles of collateral and exarch structure. The leaf-traces are furnished by the peripheral tracheal groups at the free surface of the primary portion of each stele: each trace is at first concentric and consists of primary xylem with one or more protoxylem strands near the outer surface and is completely or partially enclosed by secondary xylem and phloem. In the course of its passage to the leaf a leaf-trace loses its secondary tissues, which were added by the cambium during the traverse of the zone of secondary wood, and divides into small collateral bundles consisting mainly of spiral and scalariform tracheids. The collateral bundles accompanied by some narrow fibres are of the Myeloxylon type (fig. 420), the xylem being wholly centripetal. In the behaviour of the leaf-traces and in the vascular system of the petioles Medullosa differs from Heterangium and Lyginopteris. Each leaf-base is supplied by sets of vascular strands which pass into it from the stem at different levels ; a large leaf-base reaching 4 cm. in diameter receives as many as 70-80 bundles. The hypoderm is like that first described in the French species Myelo- xylon Landriotii^ and often spoken of as the Sparganum type of hypoderm. The branching of the rachises points to a compound frond, and the occurrence of numerous hnear pinnules with revolute margins (fig. 420, D) in association with the stem suggests that the ultimate segments were of the Alethopteris form. This inference receives confirmation from the occurrence of petrified specimens of undoubted Alethopteris rachises with the structure of Myeloxylon. It is practically certain that the leaves borne on the stems of Medullosa anglica are those long known as Alethopteris lonchitica (Vol. ii. A, p. 553, fig. 364). An interesting feature in the stems is the occurrence of cortical vascular strands (fig. 416, A, a, b), reaching a diameter of 7 mm., containing scattered tracheids in a parenchymatous core surrounded by secondary xylem and phloem. These cauline bundles are almost identical both in structure and distribution with the 1 Renault (76) B. 94 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. accessory steles in the stem of a recent Cycas, and the agreement is emphasised by the presence of short square-ended tracheids in the primary xylem. The roots branch freely and may attain a diameter of more than 1 cm. : they are generally triarch and the triangular primary xylem is enclosed by secondary xylem except opposite the proto- xylem. The cortex is like that of Lyginopteris roots and a con- spicuous double layer of superficial tissue is another feature common to both {cf. fig. 410). The exceptionally well preserved specimens described by Arber^ show very clearly the thick zone of periderm which forms the covering of older roots, and in some of the sieve- tubes groups of dark brown patches show the form and arrange- ment of the sieve-plates. Refwductive organs. We have as yet no precise information in regard to the reproductive organs of Medullosa anglica, but there can be little or no doubt that the fronds bore seeds that have long been known under the generic name of Trigonocarpus. Many years ago Mr Hemingway noticed the almost constant association of the fronds of Alethopteris lonchitica with Trigono- carpus, and Dr Kidston's discovery ^ of seed-bearing Neuropteris pinnae considerably strengthened the evidence derived from mere association. The structure of Trigonocarpus is described later (p. 117) in a section devoted to reproductive organs attributed to Medullosa. Nothing is known as to the microspore-bearing organs. While in the structure of each of the steles Medullosa anglica agrees very closely with Heterangium, it differs from that genus in the presence of three steles and in the structure of the petioles which are much less fern-like than the simpler petioles of Heter- angium and Lyginopteris. From the continental species the British species is distinguished by its simpler stelar system, though there is a close correspondence as regards individual steles. Medullosa pusilla Scott. This species, briefly referred to by Scott in 1909^ and fully described in a recent paper*, is founded on material from the 1 Arber, E. A. N. (03). 2 Kidston (O52) B. 3 Scott (09) B. p. 441 (footnote). * Scott (14). XXX] MEDULLOSA 95 Lower Coal Measures of Colne, Lancashire. It agrees in essential features with Medullosa anglica, but differs in the following parti- culars: the linear dimensions of the stem are about one quarter those of a typical stem of the older species ; the leaf -traces possess little or no secondary xylem and the relatively large decurrent leaf-bases have a narrower and simpler hypoderm. The stem has a tri-stelar vascular system enclosed in a ring of internal periderm, and each stele (3 mm. in diameter) consists of a roughly triangular strand of reticulate tracheids and a small amount of scattered parenchyma. The protoxylem is either exarch or, as in M. anglica, mesarch, the exact position being difficult to deter- mine in the available material. The secondary xylem closely resembles that of M. anglica. Scott suggests the possibility that Alethopteris decurrens may be the fohage of Medidlosa fusilla. It is possible that there is no specific difference between M. fusilla and M. anglica, but on the present evidence the employment of a distinctive name is desirable. Medullosa centrofilis de Fraine. This species was founded by Miss de Fraine^ on a petrified stem from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire. The maximum diameter of the flattened stem including four decurrent leaf-bases is 5 cm. The vascular system consists of an outer group of four steles, reduced to three by fusion in the upper part of the specimen, enclosing a central smaller stele or star-ring (fig. 417). It is the presence of the star-ring that distinguishes this type from the other two British species and forms a connecting link with certain continental MeduUosae. The peripheral steles agree with the steles of M. anglica but, as in M. pusilla, there is some doubt as to the exarch or mesarch position of the protoxylem. In the struc- ture of the xylem the central stele conforms to the rest of the vascular system and a strand of protoxylem is preserved that is almost certainly exarch. There is evidence that the peripheral steles occasionally anastomose, but the central stele follows an independent course at least in the piece of stem examined. Leaf- traces are furnished by the primary xylem of the outer steles, and 1 De Fraine (14). 96 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. they appear to be without secondary tracheids as in M. pusilla. A zone of secondary cortex encloses the vascular system as in the other British stems: it is pointed out by Miss de Fraine^ that this tissue, usually described as a deep-seated periderm, must have differed from cork in that there is no sign of drying up or decay in the tissues external to it. The leaf-bases are of the usual Myeloxylon type. In size this species is intermediate between Medullosa anglica and M. pusilla. Fig. 417. Medullosa centrofilis. Transverse section showing the deep-seated 'periderm' (broken line) surrounding four steles. (After de Fraine.) Medullosa stellata Cotta. Cotta^ described Medullosa stellata as a stem characterised by the occurrence of several many-rayed stellate columns ('viel- strahlige Sternsaule') in a pith enclosed by a double cylinder of secondary xylem. The so-called pith is the central ground-tissue of the stem and the double ' striated ring ' of Cotta is a cylindrical stele identical in structure with each of the steles of Medullosa anglica but having a tubular form instead of forming a relatively broad and short band (c/. fig. 416, D and A). Goeppert^ in his Permian Flora gave a detailed account of the species, some of his sections being cut from Cotta's material, and by the employ- ment of varietal epithets emphasised the range of variation within the limits of the type. Goeppert and Stenzel* and, several 1 De Fiaine (14) p. 259. See also Kisch (13). 2 Cotta (32) B. p. 66, PI. xiii. The well-preserved specimen figured by Cotta in his PL xin. fig. 2 is in the Dresden Museum. » Goeppert (65) A. p. 209, Pis. xl.— xun. * Goeppert and Stenzel (81). XXX] MEDULLOSA 97 years later, Weber and Sterzel^ adopted the same plan as a con- venient method of drawing attention to differences in anatomical characters. As Schenk^ pointed out, there is a considerable risk in the case of small pieces of stems of attaching excessive import- ance to structural variations, and it is b}^ no means improbable, as he said, that differences which are the expression of states of preservation or stages in development have been incorrectly regarded as distinguishing marks of individual plants. It is, however, convenient to recognise some of the more striking deviations from the type-species by speaking of the different forms as varieties though, as Weber and Sterzel fully admit, such varieties and even some of the species must be looked upon as provisional. Weber and Sterzel give expression to the provi- sional nature of their grouping by classifying the species with their varieties into form-cycles. Under the form-cycle Medullosa stellata five more or less well defined forms are recognised, the type-species being Medullosa stellata var. typica^. Medullosa stellata var. typica. Part of a transverse section of a cylindrical stem is represented diagrammatically in fig. 416, D. Very little of the cortex is pre- served: a parenchymatous axial region with scattered secretory canals contains four oval or cylindrical vascular steles, the stellate columns of Cotta or star-rings of later authors. These are of the same nature as the small central stele in the English Medullosa centrofilis. The central region of the stem in this specimen is completely surrounded by a narrow cylinder of inversely orientated secondary xylem and phloem (fig. 416, D), the phloem being on the inner side of the xylem. Beyond the xylem is a parenchy- matous band containing scattered groups of primary xylem tracheids with spiral, scalariform, and reticulate pitting, and this zone, which is usually designated the 'partial pith,' is succeeded by a second and broader, normally orientated, cylinder of secondary xylem and phloem. In this section the two con- centric cylinders separated by the partial pith form a solenostele like that of several recent Ferns except in the presence of secondary 1 Weber and Sterzel (96) B. 2 gchenk (89). 3 Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 51 ; Schenk (89). S. Ill 7 98 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. tissue. The term ^partial pith' applied to the tissue between the two cylinders of secondary tissue is misleading: this tissue (fig. 416, D, p) is the primary xylem of the stele and is homologous with the primary portion of the stele of Heterangium and of the steles of M. anglica. In many sections the continuity of the tubular stele is broken. In a section in the British Museum cut from one of Cotta's specimens^, 6 x 3*5 cm. in diameter to the outer edge of the vascular tissue, the cylindrical stele is interrupted at two places. An example of the interrupted type of stele is shown in fig. 416, F, and in fig. 416, H: the latter belongs to a distinct species. The complete type of cylindrical stele is excep- tional and occurs occasionally at different levels in the stem. An important point is that the frequent breaks in the cylinder are not connected with the exit of leaf-traces and do not, therefore, correspond to the foliar gaps in the solenostele or dictyostele of a Fern. The secondary xylem is of the cycadean type (fig. 418, B, D) like that of Heterangium and Lyginofteris and several other stems. Each of the star-rings in the axial region consists of a paren- chymatous core with scattered primary tracheids enclosed by secondary vascular tissue (fig. 418, B). The star-ring shown in fig. 418, B, from a Chemnitz stem illustrates the characteristic cycadean character of the secondary xylem with broad medullary rays : some of the innermost elements are in contact with the primary tracheids. The phloem is rendered conspicuous by the black contents in some of the elements. Both the star-rings and the larger peripheral steles are constructed on the same plan and agree with the steles of M. anglica. The star-rings occasionally branch and anastomose with one another and with the encircling stele. The star-ring in fig. 416, D at a is about to give off a small strand. Leaf-traces are furnished by the primary xylem at the edge of the 'partial pith' of the outer stele: as a leaf-trace passes outwards through the outer cylinder of secondary xylem the cambium invests it with secondary xylem and phloem, but as it passes through the cortex of the stem it becomes reduced to its primary elements, and by successive branching gives rise to 1 No. V. 8093. XXX] MEDULLOSA 99 small collateral bundles which enter the petioles. The piece of stem shown in fig. 416, G, illustrates the exit of leaf -traces from the stele and their subsequent division into several small bundles, V, which are scattered in the cortex with strands of sclerenchyma. In a specimen identified with Medullosa steUata, Schenk^ found part of a leaf-base attached to the stem : its vascular system was of the Myeloxylon type, the bundles being identical with those in the cortex of the stem seen in fig. 416, G. In some stems of M. stellata the outer, centrifugally developed, portion of the main stele is very much broader than in the example represented in fig. 416, D. The diagrammatic sketch reproduced in fig. 416, F, represents a section of a Chemnitz specimen in the British Museum^ in which the axial region containing several star-rings is almost enclosed by an inner zone of secondary xylem, and beyond the narrow primary xylem (black in the sketch) the rest of the block consists exclusively of secondary xylem 5-5 cm. broad. This example illustrates a common tendency in Medullosa towards a large excess of centrifugal over centripetal secondary vascular tissue. A similar specimen of Medullosa stellata is figured by Mougeot^ from the Vosges showing a considerable development of centrifugal xylem comparable with that in the British Museum stem. Weber and Sterzel* describe stems of Medullosa stellata showing slight periodic swellings which it is suggested, though there is no evidence in support of the opinion, may be connected with reproductive organs. Medullosa stellata var. corticata^. The specimen referred to this variety, represented in fig. 416, G, has already been quoted as affording data with regard to the origin and behaviour of the leaf- traces. In this type of stem the outer portion of the main stele is narrower than in M. stellata var. typica and the stele never forms a complete tube. The star-rings in the centre of the stem are more numerous than in the type-species of the genus. In the axial region of some stems included in the form-cycle to which 1 Schenk (82). See also ZeiUer (90) B. p. 286. 2 No. 13767, probably identical with M. stellata var. lignosa Weber and Sterzel. 3 Mougeot (52) A. p. 36, PI. iii. figs. 8—10. * Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 108. i ^ Ibid. p. 56. 7—2 100 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. M, stellata belongs there may be flatter and tangentially elongated vascular strands in addition to the cylindrical star-rings; these are termed plate-rings. In Medullosa stellata var. lignosa^ the outer xylem reaches a breadth of 4 cm. and the star-rings are reduced to one. The form M. stellata var. gigantea^ (fig. 416, K) is of special interest as an example of a stem reaching a diameter of nearly 50 cm. and having as many as 43 large and small star-rings in the axial region. A large tubular stele like that of the type-species (fig. 416, D) surrounds the central region, but in this form the cylin- drical stele a is succeeded by concentric cylinders of normally orientated xylem and phloem (fig. 416, K, 66) produced by successive cambiums either cortical or pericyclic in origin. This type of stem presents a striking resemblance to stems of Cycas and Macrozamia except in the possession of a double cylindrical stele consisting of both centripetal and centrifugal secondary xylem and phloem separated by a zone of primary xylem (partial pith). Medullosa gigas Renault. This species was founded on a piece of stem from the Permian of Autun^, consisting almost entirely of secondary xylem, which Brongniart had previously placed in his genus Palaeoxylon^. The secondary xylem reaches a diameter of 45 — 50 cm. and in the portion of the central region preserved there are a few vascular strands like the star-rings of other species. The considerable development of secondary xylem indicates a form of stem similar to some forms of M. stellata {e.g. fig. 416, F), but as the available data are insufiicient for accurate determination Renault's specific name is retained. Renault describes the internal xylem cylinder {i.e. the centripetal xylem) as very slightly developed or as hardly visible, a feature in which the French specimen shows a nearer approach to the structure of a recent Cycad. 1 Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 63. ^ m^^ p. 66. 3 Renault (96) A. p. 297 ; (93) A. PI. lxxi. figs. 1—6. * Brongniart (49) A. p. 77. XXX] MEDULLOSA 101 Medullosa porosa Cotta. The second of Cotta's species^, which has been fully investigated by Weber and Sterzel, is constructed on the same plan as that of M. stellata, but the stem is distinguished by the greater number of star-rings and, more especially, by the presence of an outer system of vascular strands in the axial region (fig. 416, M) : these form a frequently interrupted cylinder of anastomosing strands characterised by the feeble development of secondary xylem and phloem or by the absence of this tissue on the outer face of the strands. The component parts of this outer series occasionally fuse with the internal star-rings. Medullosa Solmsi Schenk^ var. typica Web. and Ster.^ This type has a large axial region containing several very small star-rings enclosed by two concentric zones of separate plate-rings (fig. 416, E) each consisting of a complete flattened cylinder of secondary xylem and phloem enclosing primary xylem. As the complete cylindrical stele of the stem of Medullosa stellata shown in fig. 416, D, was compared with the solenostele of a Fern, so in this stem (fig. 416, E) the vascular cylinder may be compared at least superficially with a dictyostele. From the inner circle of plate-rings strands are given off in the form of star-rings and these pass through the gaps in the outer system, •eventually breaking up in the cortex into numerous collateral bundles. In another form of this species, var. lignosa (fig. 416, L), the axial region is enclosed by a circle of plate-rings like those in the type-form, but these are succeeded by a circle of very asymmetrically developed and large steles with the outer xylem -and phloem much broader than the inner. Moreover in this form additional cylinders of normally orientated vascular tissue are added as in M. stellata var. gigantea and in some recent Cycads. It is noteworthy that the secondary wood of Medullosa Solmsi is rather more compact than in other species, a feature in which it to some extent agrees with the South African genus Rhexoxylon. 1 Cotta (32) B. p. 63, PI. xii. figs. 6, 7. 2 Schenk (89) p. 339. 3 Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 541, Pis ii. m. 102 MEDULLOSEAE [CH, Medullosa LeucJcarti Goeppert and Stenzel. In this species^, also from the Permian of Saxony, the central region including some star-rings is surrounded by sinuous flattened concentric steles (snake-rings) agreeing anatomically with the steles of other species and characterised by the comparatively small breadth of the secondary xylem and phloem (fig. 416, H). Leaf-traces are given off, as in M. anglica and other species, from the outer edge of the primary xylem. In some forms there is a single set of snake-rings; in others there is a double series. Fig. 418, D, shows part of the secondary xylem of a stele of this species from Chemnitz: the tracheids are in some places con- tinuous with the primary xylem, and on the outer edge of the secondary wood is a cylinder of phloem. A section of Medullosa Leuckarti figured by Goeppert and Stenzel^ shows some radial rows of very thick-walled elements in the secondary phloem which they describe as bast sclerenchyma, but Solms-Laubach^ believes them to be sieve-tubes. Precisely similar elements are figured by Scott* in M. anglica and as this author suggests the thick walls are probably not an original feature. The structure of the primary xylem is more clearly seen in fig. 418, C, and the relation between primary and secondary xylem is shown in fig. 416, I,. where the position of the protoxylem may be either exarch or mesarch. The protoxylem is only occasionally recognisable but some of the peripheral primary tracheal groups are undoubtedly mesarch. External to the stele, a part of which is reproduced in fig. 418, D, are strands of stereome elements and beyond them a band of radially elongated cells that may be 'periderm': still farther out there are some imperfectly preserved vascular bundles that are leaf -traces. This species is important as affording a complete demonstration of the organic connexion between the stem and petioles of the Myeloxylon Landrioti type which indicate that the fronds were probably Alethopteroid. The specimen on which the diagrammatic drawmg reproduced 1 Goeppert and Stenzel (81) p. 123, PI. xvi. figs. 13—15; Solms-Laubach (97); Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 79, Pis. iv. v. ix. 2 Goeppert and Stenzel (81) PI. iii. fig. 15. 3 Solms-Laubach (97) p. 179. 4 Scott (99) p. 90. XXX] MEDULLOSA 103 Fig. 418. A, Mydoxylon radiatum, part of petiole. B, Medullosa stellata; star- ring; X 14. CD, Medullosa Leuckarti; C, primary xylem ; D, part of primary stelar tissues and secondary xylem and phloem; x 6. (A — D, Kidston Coll., 1014, 1307, 1238.) 104 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. in fig. 419 is based has been investigated by Weber and Sterzel^ and by Solms-Laubach^. The figure is a slightly simplified version of that given by Weber and Sterzel; it represents the stem of Medullosa Leuckarti as a transparent object, the two lower transverse sections, B and C, being seen in perspective through Fig. 419. Medullosa Leuckarti. Diagrammatic sketch of stem showing longi- tudinal and transverse sections: for explanation see text. (After Weber and Sterzel.) the longitudinal faces. The steles are shaded obliquely in the longitudinal sections, and in the three transverse sections, A, B, C, the primary xylem (partial pith) is black and the enclosing secondary vascular tissue radially shaded. The whole block is 9 cm. in length and 6 cm. broad. Only a part of the axial region is shown internal to the peripheral snake-rings and in it are the star-rings S, S, b, and c. Outside the main steles is the narrow 1 Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 95, PI. ix. Solms-Laubach (97). XXXj MEDULLOSA 105 cortex R and portions of leaf-bases I — IV. The lowest section, C, shows part of a peripheral snake-ring with a slight swelling at / on its inner side which, as seen in sections B and A, foreshadows the separation of the star-ring S and the consequent break in the continuity of the snake-ring (d, e, sect. B). In section A the gap is closed: in the longitudinal section between B and A the star-ring S is seen to form two branches, a and 6, the branch a closing the gap between d and e in section B. These sections demonstrate the formation of a star-ring from the main peripheral stele and the formation of additional star-rings by branching. Numerous vascular bundles destined for the leaves are scat- tered in the cortex. The course of the decurrent leaf-base / is shown on the longitudinal faces, its boundary being marked by crowded stereome strands (of the Myeloxylon Landriotii type) ; other leaf-bases are represented by //, ///, and lY. In habit Medullosa Leuckarti differs from such a type as M. stellata in its relatively shorter and stouter stem and in the shorter internodes. Leaves and Repeoductive Organs. i. Leaves. It has already been stated that in some cases petioles occur in organic connexion with Medullosan stems, notably in M. anglica and M. Leuckarti: in the exceptionally rich collection in the Chemnitz Museum, which forms a fitting memorial of the work of the late Prof. Sterzel, there is a stem of M. Leuckarti bearing large petioles of the type known as Myeloxylon radiatum. The occurrence of vascular bundles in the cortex of other species of stem identical with those in the attached petioles points to a uniform type of leaf-structure so far as regards the petioles and rachises of Medullosa. While it is clearly unnecessary to distinguish by a special generic title the petrified portions of fronds known to belong to certain species of stems, the frequent occurrence of detached petioles necessitates some distinctive term. The name employed is Myeloxylon: the genus was instituted by Brongniart in 1849 for Cotta's species Medullosa elegans the petiolar nature of which was suspected by Binney in 1872. 106 MEDULLOSEAE [CH, Myeloxylon (Medullosan leaf -stalks). 1832. 31 eduUosa elegans Cottsi. 1865. Stenzelia Goepipert. 1876. Myelo- pteris Renault^; 1877, Aulacopteris Grand'Eury^. There is a very close agreement in general anatomical structure between the numerous specimens of Myeloxylon from the Permian strata of Saxony and France and the Coal Measures and Millstone Grit of England^; the genus is also recorded from the Upper Carboniferous of Kansas*. Two well-defined types instituted by Renault are, however, readily distinguished by the form of the hypodermal stereome strands. Myeloxylon may be defined as- follows: Oval or cylindrical branched axes, reaching a diameter of 15 cm., bearing pinnae having the characters of Alethofteris,. Neuropteris, Odontopteris, and some other genera that were formerly classed as Ferns. Below a single-layered epidermis, in which stomata have been recognised, occur a few layers of parenchyma : this superficial tissue, which is rarely preserved, is succeeded by a hypodermal region consisting of parenchymatous tissue and numerous vertical groups of narrow thick- walled fibres arranged as radial plates or circular, oval, or reniform strands (the Sparganum type of cortex). In the hypoderm as in the ground- tissue generally secretory canals, often accompanied by stereome, are a characteristic feature. The vascular system is represented by a considerable number of collateral bundles scattered through the ground-tissue and especially abundant in the outer region: the bundles sometimes assume a more or less regular disposition in concentric circles. Each bundle consists of a small group of xylem tracheids, for the most part spiral or scalariform, though reticulately pitted elements are by no means rare, with a single protoxylem group on the outer face next the phloem (fig. 420, B, C). As a rule the xylem is wholly centripetal, but occasionally the exarch structure becomes mesarch by the occurrence of a few centrifugal tracheids. The phloem, rarely preserved (fig. 420, B), consists of narrow sieve-tubes with parenchyma, and the bundle as a whole is often partially enclosed by a sheath of fibres. 1 Renault (76) B. p. 7. 2 Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 122 ; (90) A. p. 287. 3 Seward (93). « Penhallow (97). xxx] MEDULLOSA 107 Superficially the anatomical structure is similar to that of the petioles of Angiofteris or Marattia, and both WilHamson^ and Renault placed Myeloxylon in the Ferns ; but the collateral form of the vascular bundles, the position of the protoxylem, and the arrangement of the hypoderm tissues., are cycadean features. Myeloxylon radiatum (Renault). This type is characterised by the radially elongated stereome of the hypoderm. Prof. Zeiller^^ who has given a very clear and Fig. 420. A, B, Myeloxylon radiatum ; A, petiole f nat. size ; B, vascular bundle. C, Myeloxylon sp. vascular bundle; px, protoxylem. D, Medullosa anglica; section of pinnule. (A, B, after Zeiller; D, after Scott.) concise description of Myeloxylon, is disposed to regard Cotta's Medullosa elegans as a specifically distinct form on the ground that there are two concentric zones of stereome in the hypoderm ; 1 Williamson (76) B. p. 8. 2 Zeiller (90) B. 108 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. but this feature is shown only in one of Cotta's figures, and Weber and Sterzel^ point out that a doubUng of the hypoderm zone may be caused by accidental juxtaposition of two faulted pieces of peripheral tissue. The drawing reproduced in fig. 420, A, shows the structural plan of an unusually large petiole from the Permian of Autun : a portion of the outer tissue is seen in fig. 418, A. The vascular bundle, fig. 420, C, from a Millstone Grit specimen^, shows the centripetal nature of the xylem and fragments of phloem in the outer half of the bundle, with imperfectly preserved fibres abutting on the xylem. The characteristic hypoderm is shown also in fig. 418, A ; the double xylem strand on the left illustrates a common feature caused by the branching of vascular bundles. Several secretory canals are scattered in the ground-tissue. The pinnules of Myeloxylon radiatum, or at least of some specimens, have been shown by Kenault to be of the Neuropteris type. Myeloxylon Landrioti (Renault)^. In this species the distinguishing feature is the occurrence of the hypodermal stereome in the form of circular, oval, or reniform strands in place of the radial plates of M. radiatum. It is this form of petiole that was borne by the stems of Medullosa anglica and M. Leucharti. In M. anglica the pinnules (fig. 420, D) are of the Alethopteris type, almost certainly A. lonchitica. Renault and Zeiller have described French specimens of Myeloxylon Landrioti bearing pinnules hke those of Alethopteris aquilina and A. Grandini. Myeloxylon topekense (Penhallow). The occurrence of Myeloxylon petioles in the New World was recorded by the late Prof. Penhallow* who founded this species on some imperfectly petrified specimens from Upper Carboniferous strata at Topeka, Kansas. Enough material was available to show the Myeloxylon characters, but the preservation is too imperfect to admit of a complete diagnosis. The hypodermal stereome shows a tendency to form tangentially extended strands in place of the more circular or radially elongated groups in the European species. 1 Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 102, fig. 26. ^ Seward (93). 3 Renault (76) B. * Penhallow (97 XXX] MEDULLOSA 109 In addition to Alethojpteris , Neuropteris (including Cyclopteris) and Odontopieris fronds, which are known to possess rachises with the Myeloxylon features, there is reason to beUeve that the Permian Callipteris fronds and possibly some of the older Taeniopteris leaves may also belong to Medullosa^. It is, however, unsafe to assume that the occurrence of Myeloxylon petioles necessarily denotes the existence of Medullosa. The French stem Colpoxylon aeduense Brongn.^ bore leaves with the same general anatomical features as those of a typical Myeloxylon, and there can be little doubt that other genera of the Medulloseae also possessed fronds con- structed on the same plan as those known to have been borne by Medullosa, An interesting illustration of an injured organ that had produced a wound-cambium is afforded by a Myeloxylon petiole from the Coal Measures described by Mr Holden^. Reproductive Organs. Reference was made in volume ii. to the reasons which led to the removal of several genera of Carboniferous and Permian fronds from the Fihcales to the Pteridosperms, and in Chapter xxix. of the present volume certain species of Sphenopteris are described as the foliage of Lyginopteris and Heterangium. It is with such genera as Neuropteris, Alethopteris , Linopteris and others that we are now more especially concerned, as they represent some of the types of leaves borne by Medullosa and other members of the Medulloseae. The absence of any specimens among the large number of these common genera bearing undoubted sporangia aroused suspicion as to the correctness of the generally accepted view that these fern-hke fossils were the leaves of Palaeozoic Ferns. Subsequently the suspicion based on negative evidence was con- firmed by researches into the anatomical structure of the leaf- bases, petioles, and fragments of pinnae attached to and associated with stems of Medullosa. It is only in a few cases that actual organic connexion between reproductive organs and Medullosan leaves has been demonstrated, but from such facts as are estab- lished it is safe to make the general statement that stems of Medullosa — a generic term that undoubtedly includes plants. 1 Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 139. 2 p^g^ 142. « Holden, H. S. (10). 110 MEDUIiLOSEAE [CH. which, had we a fuller knowledge of them as complete individuals, would be assigned to more than one generic type — possessed fronds simulating in habit those of certain Ferns with some of the pinnae bearing seeds often of considerable size and in all cases of complex structure, agreeing in many respects with those of existing Cycads, while other fronds, or in some cases it may be other pinnae, bore microsporangia similar in form to the sporangia of Ferns. a. Microsporangia. Neuropteris. A. Neuropteris heterophylla^. Several examples of supposed fertile specimens of Neuropteris are recorded in palaeobotanical literature, but it was not until 1887 that any satisfactory specimen was discovered. In that year Kidston^ described a specimen of Neuropteris heterophylla from the Lower Coal Measures of Scotland in which slender forked branchlets bear small bodies at their tips some of which appear to represent four-valved organs (fig. 421, D), though the imperfect state of preservation renders impossible any definite pronounce- ment as to their structure. To the specimen are attached a few sterile pinnules, showing that it is a portion of a frond of N. hetero- phylla characterised by the substitution of reproductive organs for pinnules. The subsequent discovery of seeds attached to pinnae of the same species afforded strong presumptive evidence, almost amounting to proof, of the microsporangial nature of the Scotch specimen. For this specimen, although no precise diagnosis is possible, Dr P. Bertrand^ has proposed the generic name Neurotheca. In 1911 the Abbe Carpentier* described some small ovoid bodies, 1 — 1-5 mm. long, from the Coal Measures of France arranged in groups of 4 to 6 and in some cases said to be borne on a slender pedicel which he found in association with N. hetero- phylla and compared with sporangia described by Lesquereux from the Coal Measures of Arkansas as Sorocladus stellata^. These supposed microsporangia have recently been assigned by Bertrand^ to Sphenophyllum. 1 Vol. 11. p. 568, fig. 371. 2 Kidston (87) B. 3 Bertrand, P. (13) p. 117. * Carpentier (11) p. 10. 5 Lesquereux (80) A. p. 328, PI. XLvm. » Bertrand, P. (13) p. 120. xxx] NEUROPTERIS 111 B. Neuropteris gigantea, etc. Potoniea, Zeiller. In 1899 Zeiller^ instituted the name Potoniea for some peculiar fertile leaves found in the Coal Measures of Heraclea consisting of a branched axis with cuneate segments, 7 — 10 x 6 — 8 mm., bearing numerous fusiform bodies, 1 — 1-5 mm. long, at the upper edge (fig. 421, A). These marginal bodies he regarded as sporangia Pig. 421. A. Potoniea adiantiformis Zeill. (very slightly enlarged). B. Microsporangia of Potoniea (enlarged). C. Linopteris obliqua; side-view of microsporophyll. D. Neuropteris heterophylla, pinnules and microsporangia (?). E. Linopteris obliqua, surface -view of microsporophyll, (A, C, E, after P. Bertrand; B, after Carpentier; D, after Kidston.) and expressed the opinion that Potoniea may be the fructification of some form of Neuropteris, Mariopteris or Alethopteris. Car- pentier^ afterwards described similar though rather larger examples 1 ZeiUer (99) B. p. 52, PI. iv. fig. 19. 2 Carpentier (11) p. 12, Pis xvi. xvii. 112 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. from the Pas-de-Calais coal-field as microsporophyll fragments of some Pteridosperm : he stated that similar specimens had been found by Kidston in England. In a later work Carpentier^ described the sporangia as crowded in groups (fig. 421, B) in the substance of the thick lamina of Potoniea^ and he connected the fertile segments with Neuropteris gigantea, N. fseudogigantea Pot. and Linopteris ohliqua (Bunb.). Similar specimens are said to have been found in Holland and Silesia. Bertrand^ also records the association of Potoniea with Neuropteris gigantea and N. pseudogigantea : he describes some specimens as belonging to N. gigantea Sternb. while others, distinguished only by small differences, he attributes to N. pseudogigantea. Kidston^ has recently drawn attention to the inconstancy of the characters- mentioned by Potonie as distinguishing features of N. pseudo- gigantea, and he shows good cause for referring the examples so named to N. gigantea. The fertile lamina is almost orbicular in surface- view and attached to a shghtly excentric pedicel ; the microsporangia are borne on the lower surface and probably in groups as described by Carpentier. Neuropteris Carpentieri Kidston. Kidston* has recently de- scribed some fertile leaflets under this name from the Westphalian series of South Staffordshire which he identifies with French examples referred by Carpentier^ to Potoniea adiantiformis Zeill. The fertile pinnules are thick and sub-cyclopteroid in form; the upper surface bears densely packed, narrow and long, micro- sporangia, 4 X 0-5 mm., containing more or less spherical micro- spores 45 — 60 /x in diameter; the ventral face of the lamina on the removal of the spores shows several strong veins. With these are associated sterile pinnules of the Neuropteroid type, and examples are described intermediate between the sterile and fertile leaflets. Kidston beheves the specimens to be micro- sporophylls of some species of Neuropteris, but as the material does not suffice for identification with any known species a new name is proposed. It is pointed out that in some states of 1 Carpentier (13) p. 387, PI. x. figs. 1—6. 2 Bertrand, P. (13) p. 125. ^ Kidston (14) p. 108. 4 Ibid. p. 112, PI. VIII. figs. 1—7. 5 Carpentier (11) p. 13, PI. xvi. fig. 1. XXX] NEUROPTERIS 113 preservation the leaflets resemble Goeppert's Permian species Dictyothalamus Schrollianus^. Aleihopteris. Linopteris. No specimens of Alethopteris fronds have so far been describe(l that afford any information as to the nature of the microsporangia, and we have no means of knowing whether they were borne on naked pedicels as in Neuropteris heterophylla, or on modified pinnules as in N. gigantea. Zeiller in 1888^ described some fertile pinnules of Dictyopteris Schiltzii Roem. from Commentry bearing two rows of long sporangia: he subsequently transferred this species to the genus Linopteris^ and expressed the opinion that the sporangia occur singly and not in groups as he originally believed. Zeiller compares the fertile pinnules with the type Crossotheca. Bertrand*, as the result of examining similar specimens, has suggested that the fringe of pendulous bodies regarded by Zeiller as sporangia may be tooth-hke lobes of modified pinnules which served to protect microsporangia borne on the lower surface of the lamina. The nature of the impressions is not clear, though there is httle doubt that they are microsporophylls. The fertile pinnae of Linopteris obliqua (Bunb.) described by Carpentier^ and Bertrand^ closely resemble the microspore-b earing organs which have been referred to Neuropteris gigantea; they have the characters of Potoniea and consist of oval laminae similar to the sterile pinnules but about half their size: the lamina was attached excentrically to a slender stalk (fig. 421, C, E) and traversed by numerous occasionally anastomosing veins. No actual microsporangia have been discovered in organic connexion with the lamina. 6. Megasporangia. Neuropteris. Kidston's discovery of undoubted seeds attached to pinnae of Neuropteris'^ marked an important step in our more exact 1 See page 127. ^ Renault and Zeiller (88) A. p. 273, PI. xxxi. figs. 2, 4. 3 Zeiller (90) B. PL xi. fig. 9; (00)^ B. p. 108, fig. 83. See Vol. ii. p. 572. * Bertrand, P. (13) p. 132, PI. vi. fig. 7. '" Carpentier (13) p. 37.5, PI. viii. fig. 1. 6 Bertrand, P. (13) p. 135, pi. vi. figs. 2 — 4. ' Kidston (04); (04^); (14) p. 107, fig. 5. s. Ill 8 114 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. knowledge of the morphology of Medullosan sporophylls. Speci- mens from the ironstone balls (Coal Measures) of Coseley near Dudley showed seeds attached to portions of pinnae bearing pinnules of Neuropteris heterophylla. The seeds are approximately 3 cm. long and from I'lO to 1'40 cm. broad; oblong and gradually Fig. 422. Neuropterocarpus Kidstoni (Arber). (After Kidston; x 3.) tapering from the middle to a sHghtly curved and obtuse apical snout (fig. 422). The outer surface shows numerous longitudinal ribs which no doubt represent hypodermal fibres. The preservation of the seeds, which appear to be circular in section, is not such as to render possible a description of structural features. In their asymmetrical form the seeds agree with the genus Platyspermtim as recently defined by Arber, but Kidston's specimens are in all probability radiospermic. Kidston compares the Neuropteris seeds XXX] NETJROPTERIS 115 with Rhabdocarpus tunicatus as figured from the Commentry €oalfield^ and with specimens from Gard named by Grand'Eury R. suhtunicatus^. Additional proof of the occurrence of seeds on Neuropteris fronds is furnished by examples from the Coal Measures of Holland -described by Kidston and Jongmans^ : these seeds are of the same general type as those from Coseley but nearly twice as large, and they were borne at the tips of a dichotomously branched pedicel of Neuropteris obliqua. Grand'Eury in 1904* recorded the associa- tion of radiospermic seeds with Neuropteris fronds though no case of actual attachment was found. It is, however, noteworthy that he speaks of the frequent association with Neuropteris of seeds characterised by six or rarely twelve longitudinal keels, a feature recalling the sclerotesta of Trigonocarpus and allied seeds. Until petrified specimens are available it is impossible to refer the seeds of Neuropteris to a generic type founded on structural features: the seeds described by Kidston are, as he says, very similar in external characters to species assigned to Rhabdocarpus, and there can be little doubt as to the generic identity of the Neuropteris seeds and some of the impressions referred to Rhabdo- carpus which are characterised by a similarity in form, an apical snout that gives an asymmetrical appearance to the specimens and the presence of numerous longitudinal striations^. It is, however, by no means certain that these seeds possessed the morphological features of Rhabdocarpus as described by Brongniart in petrified examples from St Etienne®. The seeds of Neuropteris may, as Kidston suggests, agree ana- tomically more closely with Pachytesta'^ , a type that Grand'Eury associates with Alethopteris fronds. With a view to avoid the danger of incorrectly identifying petrified specimens and im- pressions that cannot be proved to belong to the same generic type, I have suggested the restriction of the name Rhabdocarpus^ 1 Renault and Zeiller (88) A. PL lxxii. fig. 19. ^ Giand'Eurj' (90) A. PI. vi. fig. 6. 3 Kidston and Jongmans (11). * Grand'Eury (04); (04^). ^ CJ. also Rhabdocarpus conicus and other forms figured by Renault (93) A. PI. LXXXVI. 6 Brongniart (74) PL xxi.; (81) Pis. ix.— xi. ' See Chapter xxxv. » gee Chapter xxxv. 8—2 116 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. to seeds that do not furnish evidence as to internal structure, and the employment of the designation Rhabdospermum for seeds that conform to those described by Brongniart as Rhabdocarjpus. The seeds of Neuropteris may be of the Rhabdospermum type or they may agree anatomically more closely with Trigono- carpus or Pachytesta; they are members of either the Trigono- carpales or the Cardiocarpales, probably the former group. Dr P. Bertrand^ assigns to Neuropteris gigantea some seeds of the Hexapterospermum {= Hexagonocarpus^) type which occur in association with cupule-like organs. These supposed cupules resemble the Potoniea leaflets with microsporangia also referred to the same species of Neuropteris; they are characterised by a laciniate edge and may be compared with the Indian fossil described by Zeiller as Ottoharia hengalensis^ (fig. 433). Dr Arber* and Dr P. Bertrand^ have independently proposed the generic name Neurospermum for the seeds of Neuropteris heterophylla and N. oblique, in preference to Rhabdocarpus : the former author speaks of the seeds of N. heterophylla as Neurospermum Kidstoni, The generic term Neuropterocarpus used by Grand' Eury in 1904^, though not defined by him, has priority and avoids the adoption of a new designation for seeds attached to Neuropteris fronds. In his definition of Neurospermum Arber makes no reference to the obliquity of the apical snout that is clearly shown in fig. 422. There is no evidence that Neuropterocarpus possessed a cupular investment comparable with that of Lagenostoma. Additional instances of the association of seeds with Neuropteris fronds are recorded by Kenier from the Belgian Coal Measures, also by Bertrand and Chodat from France : Eenier found seeds associated with N. Schlehani Stur and with the same species of frond Bertrand found impressions of oval ribbed seeds. Prof. Chodat^ has figured some fragments of Neuropteris pinnules referred to N.. auriculata Brongn. from the Stephanian of France which show small seed-like bodies apparently in organic connexion with the lamina; but the specimens are too imperfect to afford amy 1 P. Bertrand (13) p. 129, PL vii. figs. 1, 2, 7. ^ gee Chapter xxxv. 3 See page 139. * Arber (14) pp. 93, 103, PL viii. fig. 47. 5 P. Bertrand (13) p. 121. « Grand'Eury (04^) p. 785 (footnote). 7 Chodat (08) B. p. 33, fig. 15. XXX] TRIGONOCARPUS 117 satisfactory evidence as to the nature of the reproductive organs. Lotsyi has expressed the opinion that the bodies attached to Neuropteris pinnae described by Kids ton and other authors as seeds may possibly be vegetative buds, but if this were the case one would expect to find some evidence of the bud-nature in some at least of the specimens that have already been found. It would seem that the microsporophylls of Neuropteris were constructed on different plans, some being of the type described by Zeiller and other observers as Potoniea, while others bore sporangia on pinnae without any accompanying laminae ; but our knowledge of the latter form represented by Kidston's specimen of Neuropteris heterophylla (fig. 421, D) is very incomplete. On the other hand the seeds appear to have been chara;Cterised by features suggesting a close affinity to Trigonocarpus and pointing to membership of the same family. Alethopteris. Although no specimens have been discovered showing actual connexion between fronds and seeds, it is practically certain that Alethopteris leaves, or at least some species of the genus, bore seeds of the Trigonocarpus type. The association of Trigono- carpus Parkinsoni with Alethopteris lonchitica is too frequent to be fortuitous and there is further evidence afforded by certain anatomical resemblances. In France other species of Alethopteris, e.g. Alethopteris Serlii and A. Grandini, occur in association with Pachytesta^, a large seed similar to Trigonocarpus, and Trigono- carpus is found in the Pas-de-Calais coal-field with Alethopteris Serlii. TRIGONOCARPUS. Brongmart. The generic name Trigonocarpum was instituted by Brongniart in 1828^ for ovoid longitudinally ribbed 'fruits' from Upper Carboniferous strata, the type-species being named T. Parkinsoni. The generic name is often altered to Trigonocarpon : WilHamson*, 1 Lotsy (09) p. 72. 2 Qrand'Eury (04); (04) B. 3 Brongniart (28) A. p. 137. * Williamson ( 77 ) B. ; Scott andMaslen(07) p. 90 (footnote) also refer to Trigono- carpon as having been used by Brongniart in 1849. 118 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. who adopted this form, states that Brongniart substituted Trigono- carjpon for Trigonocarpum in his Tableau^, but in that work the original termination is used, the form Trigonocarpon, probably the result of a slip, appearing only in the index. In his later work on seeds Brongniart adopted the name Trigonocarpus, and in recent years this has been widely employed. Among other species named by Brongniart are two previously referred by Sternberg to Palmacites. Several examples of Brongniart's genus were described by Lindley and Hutton, and in their descrip- tion of T. Noeggerathii the statement is made that a fractured specimen demonstrated that 'the fossil in its ordinary state is r|ir:-^x^ ^ds^ Fig. 423. Casts of the seed-cavity of Trigonocarpus Parkinsoni. (Manchester Museum. ^ nat. size.) an interior part divested of fleshy covering '2; this suspicion of the true nature of the nut-like fossils was afterwards proved correct by the investigations of Hooker and Binney^ and by the later work of Wilhamson. The specimens on which the genus was founded are casts of seed-cavities and it is in this state that the seeds are usually preserved, often in large numbers, in the sandstones of the Coal Measures, as in the block shown in fig. 423 from the famous quarry at Peel near Bolton, Lancashire. Another type of preservation is represented by the seeds figured by Lindley and Hutton as Carpoliihes alata^, but the generic identity of the two states was not recognised until the discovery of petrified material afforded the clue. Figs. 424, 1, 425 illustrate the appear- ance of Trigonocarpus when preserved as a carbonised impression 1 Brongniart (49) A. p. 91. ^ Lindley and Hutton (35) A. p. 172. 3 Hooker and Binney (55). * Lindley and Hutton (33) A. PI. 87. XXX] TRIGONOCARPUS 119 showing a thick fleshy envelope enclosing an oval kernel with a hard wall prolonged upwards as a longer or shorter micro- pyle. Casts of the seed-cavitv are represented in figs. 423; 424, 2, 3. The surface of these casts occasionally shows one or more short cyhndrical projections which are probably extensions of the sand or mud into holes formed in the testa by boring insects. The view that Trigonocar'pus seeds are 'obviously Palm fruits' was not accepted by Hooker and Binney who incHned to regard them as the seeds of Conifers and compared them especially with the similar nuts of Ginkgo seeds (cf. fig. 631, C). It was Mr Wild^ who was first struck by the association of Trigonocarpus and the petioles of Medullosa (Myeloxylon) and by some resemblances in structure between the testa and the hypoderm of the petioles; though, as Scott and Maslen^ point out, the agreement is not so close as Wild beheved, his view of a possible connexion between the reproductive and vegetative organs has been confirmed. Williamson extended our knowledge of the genus by his accoimt of Trigonocarpus olivaeformis Lind. and Hutt., a form that is specifically identical with T. Parkinsoni Brongn. This author also drew attention to the close resemblance between Brongniart's three genera Trigonocarpus, Hexapterospermum, Tripterospermum and expressed doubts as to the possibility of founding specific differences on casts of the Trigonocarpus type without the evidence of anatomy. Our knowledge of the structure of Trigonocarpus has in recent years been considerably extended by the researches of Oliver, Scott and Maslen, and Sahsbury. Trigonocarpus Parkinsoni^ Brongniart. The seeds of this species Hke all examples of the genus are radiospermic, that is radially symmetrical in contrast to the flattened or platyspermic seeds. The complete seed is elongate oval in form when preserved as an impression (fig. 425, A) and reaches a length of 4 — 5 cm. : the casts of the seed-cavity are ovoid and provided with three prominent ridges (fig. 424, 2, 3). The testa forms a thick covering differentiated into three regions, an outer flesh or sarcotesta, a sclerous shell or sclerotesta, and 1 Wild (00). 2 Scott and Maslen (07) p. 96. 3 Scott and Maslen (07). 120 MEDUTJ^OSEAE [CH. an inner flesh. Transverse sections show that the sclerotesta has three sharp longitudinal keels with corresponding furrows on the inner face, and between each pair of main ribs are 2 — 3 less prominent ridges, usually 12 in all (fig. 426). The sarcotesta consists of thin- walled parenchyma passing externally into a a — , Fig. 424. Trigonocar^s. 1. Section of imperfect seed showing a micropyle; b, sclerotesta; c, cast of seed-cavity; 2, 3, apical and basal view of seed-cast. (Approximately nat. size.) M. S. Fig. 425. Trigonocarpus Parkinsoni. A. Impression showing the nucule and sarcotesta. (= Carpolithes alata Lind. and Hutt.) B. Specimen with long micropyle. (A, nat. size; from the Lower Coal Measures of Kilmarnock; B, nat. size; Middle C. M. of Yorkshire. Kidston Coll., 1579 and 1062.) xxx] TRIGONOCARPIJS 121 more lacunar tissue with a palisade-like hypoder-m : the sclerotesta consists of thick cells which interlace and form an efficient pro- tective shell. Both the sarcotesta and sclerotesta are continued into the apical region as the wall of the long micropyle, the sarcotesta being prolonged beyond the sclerotesta at the apex of Fig. 426. Trigonocarpus Parkinsoni. A, longitudinal section; Sa, Sc, if, sarco- testa, sclerotesta, inner flesh; mi, micropyle; Pc, pollen-chamber; v, vascular bundles ; m, megaspore and prothallus ; t, tracheal disc ; nt, tracheids in the nucellus. B, transverse section of the upper region showing the sarcotesta, sclerotesta (black) and the micropj^le. C, transverse section of T. Parkinsoni. T>, transverse section of Trigonocarpus shorensis. (A, C, after Scott; B, after Wild; D, after Salisbury.) 122 MEDTJLLOSEAE [CH. the integument^. The micropyle is triangular in section and may exceed in length the whole seed (figs. 425; 426, A). Its form as seen in transverse section (fig. 426, B) suggests the presence of wings : this appearance may be deceptive and due to pressure or, more probably, it represents an original feature. The seed- body, that is the portion enclosed by the integument, consists of the nucellus, represented by a few crushed layers of cells^ bounded by a well-defined epidermis; the nucellus is separated from the integument from the base of the seed upwards, an important feature in which this and some other Palaeozoic seeds differ from Lagenostoma and the seeds of recent Cycads which are characterised by an integument adnate to the nucellus up to the level of the shoulder ; the seeds of the Conifer Phyllocladus afford an example of separation of integument and nucellus as in Trigonocarpus. The innermost layer of the nucellus consists mainly of tracheal tissue investing the large megaspore (fig. 426, A, C, m) which is preserved as a contracted membrane detached from the nucellus after the death of the seed. At the summit of the nucellus is a relatively small pollen-chamber (fig. 426, A, Pc) like a broad and low cupola bearing a terminal beak which extended some distance into the micropylar tube. No microspores have been found in this species, but Ohver^ records the occurrence of multicellular microspores in Trigonocarpus pusillus. The pedicel of the seed had a central strand of sclerous tissue penetrated by a concentric vascular bundle which gives off six strands to supply the sarcotesta (fig. 426, C, v) and then passes into the nucellus where it forms a tracheal sheath (fig. 426, A, nt) surrounding the lower part of the megaspore and at a higher level breaks up into anastomosing strands of tracheids which reach up to the plane of insertion of the pollen-chamber. A second species described by Scott and Maslen as Trigono- carpus Oliveri has been further investigated by Salisbury who finds that it is an 8-angled seed which cannot be retained in the genus Trigonocarfus: its systematic position 'must for the present remain uncertain^.' Dr Arber has recently described a new species of Trigonocarpus, T. Moyseyi^, from the Nottingham Coal-field 1 Arber, A (14). 2 Oliver (04) p. 97. 3 Salisbury (14) p. 65. « Arber, E. A. N. (14) p. 95, PL vi. fig. 1. XXX] TRIGONOCARPUS 123 (Middle Coal Measures), similar to T, Parkinsoni but much broader in proportion to its length: this species is founded on an impression without structure. The species Trigo7iocarpus Daivesi Lind. and Hutt.^, from the Middle Coal Measures of Lancashire, was founded on casts differing in their large dimensions from those of T. Parkinsoni: specimens referred to this species were described by Fiedler^ from Saxony in 1857 and Lesquereux^ figures similar casts from the Upper Carboniferous and Permian rocks of North America. Trigonocarpus shorensis Salisbury. This species, founded on specimens from the Lower Coal Measures of Shore, Lancashire*, may exceed 4 cm. in length and has a breadth of 2-5 cm. In general plan it agrees with T. Parkin- soni but there are certain well-marked differences : the micropyle is much shorter; the thick sarcotesta, attaining a breadth of 6 mm. at the base of the micropyle, is characterised by the presence of six peripherally placed vascular bundles (fig. 426, D, v) in contrast to the deeply embedded bundles of T. Parkinsoni. Below the epidermis of the sarcotesta is a hypoderm formed of radially disposed plates of sclerous tissue similar to that of Myelo- xylon and different from the pahsade-like hypoderm of the type- species. Within the sarcotesta is a hard shell, the sclero testa, characterised by three prominent ribs extending from base to apex and three shorter ribs which reach from the chalaza to about a third of the length of the seed. The fact that the sarco- testa and sclerotesta pass gradually into one another is a point in favour of the view that the integument is a single structure. There appears to be good evidence of the restriction of an inner flesh to the micropylar region, whereas this tissue in T. Parkinsoni was probably continuous over the whole inner face of the sclero- testa. The sarcotesta is lacunar in its outer part as in some other types of Palaeozoic seeds, a feature probably connected with floating efficiency. Trigonocarpus shorensis occurs in association with Myeloxylon petioles, and there is a resemblance between 1 Lindley and Hutton (37) A. PI. 221 ; Arber loc. cit. p. 95, PI. vi. fig. 8. 2 Fiedler (57) PI. xxvn. fig. 39. 3 Lesquereux (80) A. PI. 85; (84) A. PI. m. « Salisbury (14). 124 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. the seed and the vegetative organs in the structure of the hypoderm as also in the structure of the secretory sacs which are particularly numerous in this species. Sahsbury draws attention to the close resemblance between the form of T. shorensis and the seeds found in organic connexion with pinnae of Neuropteris ohliqua^. The species T. corrugatus described by Renault^ bears a close resemblance to T. shorensis. Other Genera founded in part on Reproductive Organs WHICH MAY belong TO THE MeDULLOSEAE. Codonotheca, Schiitzia, Whittleseya, Dolerophyllum, Otto- karia, Strobilites. CODONOTHECA. Sellards. Codonotheca caduca Sellards. This genus was founded on some spore-bearing bodies from the Coal Measures of Ilhnois^: nothing is known as to the plant which bore them, but Sellards is inclined to associate them with Neuropteris decipiens Lesq.*, a species abundant in the same coal-field. Whatever may have been the parent-plant it is probable, as the author of the genus believes, that Codonotheca is the microspore-bearing organ of a Pteridosperm. As shown in fig. 427, 5, the form is that of a stalked cuj) consisting in the basal portion of a stout axis, the peripheral tissue of which is beheved to have been fleshy, containing an axial rod of conducting tissue running up to the floor of the cup, c, and then dividing into six vascular strands, each of which forks into two branches. The upper part is composed of six linear segments united basally to form the sloping surface of the cup. On the inner face of each segment is a more or less well-defined depression covered with large elhptical spores -29 — -31 mm. long by -18 — 19 mm. broad (fig. 427, 6, 8). The presence of a median ridge (fig. 427, 8) indicates a bilateral origin. ' There is no grouping of the spores or other indication of the location of the sporangia, which were doubtless more or less completely immersed in the tissue, the dividing wall disappearing at maturity.' The spores 1 See page 115. 2 Renault (96) A. p. 399; (93) A. PL lxxxv. fig. 9; SaUsbury (14) p. 66. 3 Sellards (03) p. 90; (07). 4 Lesquereux (80) A. p. 93; (84) A. p. 733, PL xciv. figs. 1, 2. xxx] CODONOTHECA 125 are seen in fig. 427, 2, 3, on the inner face of the lobes. Some of the specimens have a fairly long pedicel : in the example shown in fig. 427, 1, the fleshy part of the basal portion is not preserved, only the more resistant vascular core. In a later account of these organs Sellards speaks of several lying by the side of a central stalk to which he thinks they were originally attached by slender pedicels. In view of Dr Benson's interpretation of the morpho- logy of Telangium it is permissible to suggest that if a central Fig. 427. Codonotheca caduca. 1. The vascular tissue preserved as a conical base which was originally surrounded by fleshy tissue (c/. 5); I — III, VI, vascular bundles (x 2). 2, 3. Segments with spores; c, floor of cup (nat. size). 4. Vascular tissue as a cone in the middle of the fleshy base (nat. size). 5. Plan of the whole organ opened out flat (nat. size). 6. Spores (x 28). 8. A single spore showing median slit (x 84). (After Sellards.) sporangium in such a synangium as that of Codonotheca developed a megaspore and the peripheral sporogenous lobes were sterilised, the result would be an arrangement not unlike the apical region of the seed Physostoma, the tentacles of which have been homo- logised with the canopy of Lagenostoma. There are obvious diffi- culties in the way of this, perhaps strained, comparison : the larger size of the spore-bearing linear segments of Codonotheca 126 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. led Sellards to regard each, as a syjaangium rather than a single sporangium. But precise information as to the structure of the American fossils is not as yet available. If the association of Codonotheca with Neuropteris fronds has any significance it would favour a reference of these organs to the Medulloseae. In the absence of anatomical data it is impossible in some cases to dis- tinguish microspore-bearing organs of the Codonotheca type from small seeds enclosed in a lobed cupule or even seeds with a lobed integument: a case in point is the New Brunswick species Pterispermostrohus bifurcatus Stopes^. A Spitzbergen, Culm, fossil recently described by Nathorst^ as Codonotheca (?) pusilla is briefly referred to under the genus Pterispermostrohus. SCHUTZIA. Geinitz. This generic name was instituted by Geinitz^ for some Permian fossils obtained by Bergmeister Schiitz and regarded by the author of the genus as probably fertile branches of some Conifer. A more complete account was pubhshed by Goeppert* in his 'Permian Flora/ where the name Anthodiopsis Beinertiana occurs on the Plates, printed before the publication of Geinitz's de- scription, but in the text the specimens are referred to Schutzia anomala. Schutzia anomala Geinitz. The type-species, recorded from Bohemia and Silesia, is repre- sented by fertile shoots consisting of a thick main axis bearing apparently two-ranked though probably spirally disposed short lateral branches, each of which terminates in a receptacle with numerous crowded linear-lanceolate bracts superficially resembling a partially expanded inflorescence of a Composite. Goeppert believed that the branches bore seeds and he refers to this species a number of detached, longitudinally striated and bluntly ter- minated, seeds. The same author describes other specimens from 1 Stopes (14) p. 74. See page 66. 2 Nathorst (14) p. 23. See page 67. 3 Geinitz (63) p. 525, PI. vi. * Goeppert (65) p. 161, Pis. xxiii — iv. The specimens figured by Goeppert, which I saw some years ago in the Breslau Museum, do not show the finer characters very clearly. XXX] SCHUTZIA 127 the same localities associated with Schiltzia anomala, which he names Dictyothalamiis SchroUianus^: in habit these agree closely with Schiltzia but the receptacles, the reticulate appearance of which suggested the generic name Dictyothalamus , bear a large number of small bodies regarded as seeds. The preservation of the fossils is not such as to enable us to determine their true nature but it is probable that Schiltzia and Dictyothalamus are not generically distinct. In his description of Dictyothalamus •Goeppert suggests that the two associated types may be the male and female shoots of one plant, but he speaks of seeds in both cases. Schimper^, who unites Dictyothalamus with Schiltzia, regards the latter as female and the former as male. Schiltzia Bennieana Kidston. This species, described by Kidston^ from the Calciferous series of Scotland, differs from S. anomala in its much more slender a,xis and in the relatively narrower and less globular clusters of bract-like appendages. The principal axis bears three lateral branches with terminal clusters of acute and narrow Hnear scale- leaves. No seeds were found in association with the specimens. Schiltzia permiensis (Renault). Renault founded this Permian species as Antholithus permiensis^ on a specimen from Lodeve; it consists of an incomplete inflorescence 6-4 cm. long bearing four lateral branches with stalks 1-5 to 2 cm. long terminated by clusters of small oval bracts 5 mm. long. Renault compares the fossil with the recent Conifers Glyptostrohils and Tsuga, but it exhibits a much closer resemblance to Schiltzia anomala. The genus Schiltzia, originally described from Permian strata, is recorded also from Westphalian strata in North Africa^ as well as from Lower Carboniferous rocks in Scotland. The data at present available are insufficient to determine the morphological nature of the fertile branches : the evidence adduced by Goeppert in support of the occurrence of seeds is not convincing and the ^ Goeppert (65) p. 164, Pis. xxiv— v. 2 Schimper (72) A. p. 358. 3 Kidston (84) PI. v. fig. 2. ^ Renault (96) A. p. 379, fig. 73. 5 Zeiller in Douville and Zeiller (08). 128 MEDIILLOSEAE [CH, interpretation of the bract-like appendages is still an open question ; they may have formed a cupular investment to seeds, but in the Scotch species the general appearance rather suggests that they may be microspore-bearing organs comparable with those of Codonotheca^. There are no adequate grounds for supposing Schutzia to belong to the Coniferales, a view advanced by some authors; it is much more likely to represent the fertile shoots of a Pteridosperm. WHITTLE SE Y A. Newberry. The genus Whittleseya, referred by many authors to the Ginhgoales, has no substantial claim to be regarded as alhed to that group : its position is still uncertain, but the recent discovery of fertile specimens suggests the probability of a relationship to Potoniea and an identification of Whittleseya as another form of microsporophyll of a Pteridosperm. Fig. 428. A, Cv Whittleseya elegans. A, single leaflet, from Pennsylvania. (After Lesquereux; f nat. size.) C, diagrammatic sketch of part of a leaflet showing the teeth, the striated texture of the carbonised layer, and the vein-Uke markings on a lower surface. (After Thomas; enlarged.) B. Whittleseya brevifolia. (After White; the smaller figure f nat. The generic name was given by Newberry^ to some leaves, or possibly leaflets, originally described by C. Whittlesey from 1 Seepage 124. ^ Newberry (54). XXX] WHITTLESEYA 129 the Coal Measures of Ohio. Whittleseya is represented by species from several North American localities^ in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick^ ; it occurs in Silesia and has recently been found in the English Coal Measures^. The genus is confined to Upper Carboniferous strata. The leaves are fairly thick ; the lamina is oblong, cuneate, broadly triangular or hnear, usually rounded and truncate (fig. 428, A, C), generally dentate at the distal end, the proximal portion being gradually or abruptly contracted and occasionally prolonged into a short pedicel. The veins or ribs are parallel to the sides of the lamina and except near the base unbranched. Whittleseya elegans Newberry. The type-species, from North America and Europe, is char- acterised by its shovel-Uke lamina from 3 to 6 cm. long closely resembling in shape some lepidopterous scales; the surface is ribbed, each rib corresponding to a tooth on the distal margin ; on each of the parallel ridges are 4 — 5 longitudinal lines indicating either veins or stereome strands (fig. 428, A, C). The examination of preparations made by Dr Kidston from a leaflet of this species enables me to add a few facts with regard to the microspores. The spores, w^hich cover almost the whole surface of the lamina, show a tendency to a more or less definite arrangement in longi- tudinal rows. Two types of cuticularised membrane are repre- sented among the associated fragments : in some pieces of cuticle the cells are short and have straight walls while in others the preservation is inferior and the cells appear to be longer and narrower. One or both of these membranes probably belong to the sporangia. The oval slit, which is a striking feature on several of the spores (fig. 429), points to their bilateral nature and dehiscence along the major axis. A comparison of these spores with those obtained by Kidston from the Enghsh species Whittleseya fertilis reveals a very close agreement both in size and shape and confirms the identification of the Staffordshire specimens as leaflets of Whittleseya. The large size of the micro- spores and the gaping oval aperture in some of them are features 1 Lesquereux (80) A. p. 523, PI. iv ; (84). For other references see Potonie (04). 2 White, D. (01). 3 Thomas, H. H. (12); Kidston (14) p. 166. s. Ill 9 130 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. in which they agree closely with the spores of Dolerophyllum fertile described by Renault^. In both cases the spores tend to be arranged in long groups and they are practically identical in form and in the nature of the exine; those of Dolerophyllum, are 280/x long while those of W. fertilis reach a length of 220/x. In some of the Whittleseya spores the exine has spht as in the specimen shown in fig. 429, but in others there are two curved lines along which dehiscence has begun, a character in which the spores appear to be identical with those of Dolerophyllum Fig. 429. Microspores of Whittleseya elegans. A, a group of spores ; B, a single spore. (Preparations made from an American specimen, No. 2314, in Dr Kidston's Collection.) described by Renault who speaks of dehiscence by means of an operculum. There is, I venture to think, little doubt as to the very close affinity of the two types. The systematic position of Dolerophyllum is not certainly estabhshed; if the generic identity of the leaves described as D. Berthieri Ren. and the petrified specimens named D. fertile is assumed, it is a legitimate inference that the genus is founded on fertile pinnules of a Pterido- sperm with fohage of the Neuropteris or Cyclopteris form. It would seem probable that both Whittleseya and Dolerophyllum 1 Renault (93) A. PI. lxxii; (96) A. p. 268. See page 137. XXX] WHITTLESEYA 131 fertile are microspore-bearing leaflets of Pteridosperms, possibly of some Medullosan plants. The leaflets of Whittlesey a agree in form fairly closely with those of Potoniea adiantiformis Zeill. described on a previous page^ as the male organs of a Pteridosperm. The specimens described by Lesquereux from Pennsylvania as W. integrifolia and W. undulata are less satisfactory than W. elegans. The Arkansas species W. microphylla^, characterised by the obcuneate form of the lamina, is said to occur not only as detached leaflets but in loose bunches at the ends of slender axes, a circumstance favourable to the suggestion, based on the recently described English specimens, that the Whittleseya leaves may be fertile pinnules of a Pteridosperm frond. Among other species attributed to Newberry's genus is W. hrevifolia Wh. from Nova Scotia^ with much smaller broadly triangular leaves 7 mm. long exclusive of the petiole and 8 mm. broad at the distal end (fig. 428, B). Dr Matthew* has also described a Canadian species W. concinna from New Brunswick in beds assigned by Dr Stopes^ to the Westphalian series. Whittleseya Jertilis Kidston. Since the discovery of Whittleseya elegans in the Coal Measures of Staffordshire recorded by Mr Thomas, Dr Kidston has published an account of some specimens from the same district under the name Whittleseya {1) fertilis^ : these consist of smaller cuneate scale-leaves or leaflets 1-4 — 2-4 cm. long and 8 — 9 mm. broad; the lamina has a dentate upper margin and is longitudinally ribbed. The scales occur in superposed pairs, closely fitting but not organically connected, at least in the state in which they are preserved; each pair forms a sporangium-hke case enclosing numerous spores but the actual sporangia or synangia have not been preserved. Kidston describes the spores as 210 — 222/x in length, elliptical, and characterised in many cases by an oval sht; they are practically identical with the microspores of W. elegans. 1 Page 111. 2 ^hite (01) p. 108. 3 Ibid. p. 104, PI. VII. figs. 3, 3a. * Matthew (10). 5 Stopes (14) p. 78. « Kidston (14) p. 166, PI. xv. figs. 1—10. 9—2 132 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. DOLEROPHYLLUM. Saporta. This name was proposed^ primarily for a large ovoid petrified bud composed of rolled Cyclopteroid leaves from Permian rocks in the Ural Mountains, which had been previously described by more than one writer under different names and regarded as a young shoot of a Palm or other Monocotyledon. Eichwald^, who published good drawings, called the fossil Noeggerathia Goepperti. Saporta connected with this species some leaf-impres- sions from the Permian of Bohemia described by Goeppert^ as Noeggerathia cyclopteroides : in his family Dolerophylleae"* the French author included other leaves which are probably not closely related to the type-species, Dolerophyllum Goepperti, The Dolerophylleae are spoken of by Saporta and Marion^ as Progymnosperms. Before the publication of Saporta's note Grand'Eury had instituted the genus Doleropteris^ and the family Doleropteroideae ; in the former he included several forms of leaves agreeing generally with Goeppert's Noeggerathia cyclo- pteroides. Zeiller"^ adopts Grand' Eury's designation for the Russian fossil in preference to Dolerophyllum, a choice justified by considerations of priority; but the latter name is retained in this account as it was assigned by Saporta to the specimen of greatest botanical interest, namely Dolerophyllum Goepperti, and because it does not suggest affinity to Ferns. Dolerophyllum Goepperti (Eichwald). The type-species is from the Zechstein of Orenburg in the Urals and no specimens having precisely the same structure have been found elsewhere. Eichwald assigned it, with leaf-impressions of various kinds, to the Noeggerathieae and named it Noeggerathia Goepperti: it had previously been described by Kutorga^ as Aroides crassispatha and Unger^ included it among the Palms as Palaeospathe aroidea. The species has been described also by Saporta and Marion and by Renault^^. The following account is. 1 Saporta (78). 2 Eichwald (55) PL xvm. fig. 18; (60) p. 252. 3 Goeppert (65) p. 157, PL xxi. fig. 4. * Saporta (78^). 5 Saporta and Marion (85) pp. 16, 68. « Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 192. ' Zeiller (00^) B. p. 217. 8 Kutorga (42). » Unger (50) A. p. 334. ^» Renault (96) A. p. 262. XXX D OLEROPHYLLUM 133 based on sections cut from a specimen in the British Museum^ which, though assigned on the label (within a query) to France and named Dolerophyllum Berthieri, is undoubtedly Eichwald's species from East Russia. The specimen (fig. 430) is 9 cm. long and 4-2 cm. broad : at the shghtly contracted and broken base is a piece of immature axis (fig. 430, B, a) 12 mm. in diameter overtopped by a mass of closely packed leaves encirchng one another like the bulb-scales of an Onion (fig. 430 A, C)^. Most of the leaves included in the Fig. 430. Dolerophyllum Goepperti. Bud in surface-view, A; in longitudinal section, B, C; in transverse section, D. (British Museum; A, f nat. size.) bud were attached to the axis below the broken base. The curved, dichotomously branched, veins are seen on some of the pieces of lamina on the surface of the bud (fig. 430, A). The considerable breadth of the leaves is demonstrated by the longi- tudinal and transverse sections. In fig. C most of the laminae can be traced through the whole height of each of the steep-sided arches : a few overlapping margins are seen in fig. D. The veins are for the most parf imperfectly preserved and appear as clear 1 No. V. 8114. 2 A specimen from Orenburg in the Dresden Museum shows the same surface- features as the British Museum specimen and agrees with the originals of Goeppert's figures which are in the Breslau University Museum. 134 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. spaces at regular intervals in the brown mesophyll. The axis of the shoot consists of homogeneous parenchyma except near the sloping sides where narrow dark bands (fig. 430, B, a) mark the position of desmogen-strands of thin-walled elongated elements Fig. 431. Dolerophyllum Goepperti. Transverse sections of leaves, e, epidermis; 5, secretory cells ; f , transf usion-tracheids ; pa;, protoxylem. (British Museum.) representing an early stage in the development of vascular bundles some of which have already produced spiral tracheids. Short secretory cells accompany the immature conducting elements. The lamina sUghtly exceeds 2 mm. in thickness in the broadest part: the mesophyll is composed of large parenchymatous cells XXX] DOLEROPHYLLUM 135 of elliptical or spherical form often loosely attached owing to the well-developed system of intercellular spaces. The lower epi- dermis, assuming that the outer face of the rolled leaves is the morphologically lower surface, forms a uniform layer of palisade cells characterised by their free conical ends (fig. 431, A, B, e) which in some obhque sections appear as sharply pointed papillae with almost filiform apices; but while the cells were doubtless papillose hke those of the epidermis of a velvety petal, the pointed form is due in part to the greater distinctness of the dark contents as compared with the lighter cell-walls. The upper epidermis is much less distinct; it consists of smaller flattened cells with occasional stomata. Renault^ figures a specimen with stomata in a better state of preservation. The vascular bundles are rendered conspicuous by large secretory cells on the lower side, in the larger veins in the form of an arc or irregular group (fig. 432, A), but in the finer veins as single cells (fig. 431, A, B). These sacs resemble the tannin cells accompanying the veins in a leaf of Ginkgo {cf. fig. 631, G). The xylem- elements are of two kinds, (i) elongated spiral and scalariform conducting elements, forming a vertical plate of a few rows in the larger veins (figs. 431, 432) or a small compact group in the more slender veins (fig. 413, A, B) ; (ii) much larger isodiametric cells with reticulate or spiral thickening resembhng the transfusion-tracheids of Conifers or, perhaps more closely, similar elements in the leaves of Lepido- dendron. These short tracheids are especially abundant on the flanks of the conducting tracheids (figs. 431, t; 432, A, t), but they sometimes form a complete investment. In the obhquely cut vein reproduced in fig. 431, D, the transfusion-tracheids are abundant : a few are enlarged in fig. 431, E. In the smaller veins (fig. 431, A, B) they are represented by the larger elements, t, on the sides of the conducting strands. The protoxylem lies close to the upper edge in the middle hne (px, figs. 431, A ; 432, A) ; it is difficult to determine its precise position, but it would seem to be shghtly internal, the bundle being not quite endarch. No phloem was recognised in the British Museum specimen, but it presumably occurred, if present, where the black patch is shown 1 Renault (96) A. p. 265, fig. 43. 136 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. in fig. 432, A. Renault describes some phloem in sections which he examined. The mesophyll next the upper surface is in most cases repre- sented by spaces between the veins which give a crenulated outline to the parenchyma (fig. 430, C, D) ; in some places the spaces contain remains of very loose and crowded cells suggesting the original presence of very lacunar tissue or possibly of thin- walled storage-cells. The confinement of stomata to what is assumed to be the upper surface may, as Renault and others have suggested, indicate leaves which floated on water, an inference opposed to the view that the gaps in the mesophyll mark the position of water-tissue. No specimens have been described which enable us to correlate with certainty mature leaves or fohage-shoots with the petrified bud. It is, however, not improbable that the impression from Mount Pele near Epinac named by Renault Dolerophyllum Berthieri^ may be correctly referred to the same genus. The type-specimen consists of an axis, whether a rachis of a compound leaf or a shoot with simple leaves cannot be determined, bearing partially overlapping more or less orbicular leaves 18 — 20 cm. in diameter, with a Cyclopteris venation. Among other leaves of unknown affinity referred to the same genus attention is drawn to Dolerophyllum pseudopeltatum (Grand'Eury)^ with an orbicular lamina reaching in some specimens 22 x 19 cm. Specimens of Dolerophyllum pseudopeltatum are figured by Renault from the Commentry coal-field^, some of which reach a diameter of 12 cm. The only British specimen of a leaflet of this type which I have seen is one in Dr Kidston's collection from the Stephanian series, Glamorganshire. It is probable that some at least of the impressions assigned to Dolerophyllum or Doleropteris would be more appropriately included in Cyclopteris or Cardiopteris and may have been borne on the axis of large Pteridosperm fronds. Grand'Eury* has also called attention to the difficulty of distin- guishing the larger Cyclopteris leafiets from Dolerophyllum. Some 1 Renault (96) A. p. 262, PI. xxii. fig. 1. 2 Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 196, PL xvi ; (90) A. PI. viii. fig. 1 ; Zeiller (06) B. p. 192. 3 Renault and Zeiller (90) A. p. 556, PI. lvii. * Grand'Eury (04). xxx] DOLEBOPHYLLUM 137 of the Cyclopteroid leaflets figured by Roehl^ on Neuropteris fronds differ but slightly from those of D. pseudopeltatum. The shoot showing large leaf -scars figured by Saporta and Marion^ as proba- bly the axis of a Dolerophyllum may well be a piece of Cordaites. Microsporophylls assigned to Dolerophyllum. Certain problematical fossils found in association with the sterile leaves of Dolerophyllum Berihieri have been described by Fig. 432. A. Dolerophyllum Goepperti, section of vein. B. Dolerophyllum Berthieri; s, microspores. C. Dolerophyllum fertile. D. Dolerophyllum fertile, microspores. (After Renault.) Renault as the male organs of that species. These are elHptical discs, 6 X 5 cm., with an excentrically placed stalk : embedded in a carbonised lamina are numerous rows of elliptical bodies, 1 Roehl (69) B. PL xvii. 2 gaporta and Marion (85) fig. 29. 138 MEDTJLLOSEAE [CH. 410/x»x 280/x, characterised by two curved longitudinal grooves on the surface and regarded by Renault as pollen-grains. The chains of these microspores radiate outwards from the neighbour- hood of the stalk and cover most of the surface of the disc (fig. 432, B). Some silicified pieces of similar spore-bearing discs from Grand' Croix named Dolerophyllum fertile^ afford additional information as to these remarkable reproductive organs. The earher account of this species by Renault is confirmed by Solms- Laubach^ who examined the original sections. The peltate fleshy discs preserved as incomplete specimens consist of lacunar parenchyma 15 — 18 mm. thick traversed at right angles to the surface by numerous loculi (fig. 432, C), circular or oval in trans- verse section, containing large numbers of microspores, s, similar in size and form to those on the carbonised discs of the Mt Pele specimen. Vascular strands occur between and parallel to the spore-chambers. The spores contain 8—10 cells (fig. 432, D) and Renault beHeves that dehiscence of the exine occurred along the two deep grooves which mark the limits of an operculum. He emphasises the peculiar structure of the microspores by speaking of them as prepolHnia: in size and in the presence of internal cells ( ? male prothallus) they resemble the spores found in the pollen-chamber of a seed described by Renault as Aetheo- testa elliptical which he thinks may belong to a member of the Dolerophylleae. It has also been suggested that Codonospermum may be a seed of Dolerophyllum^. An unconvincing specimen described by Saporta and Marion^ as a seed-bearing bract is regarded by them as referable to Dolerophyllum, but the evidence for any connexion is far from satisfactory. There is nothing definite to be said with regard to the affinity of Dolerophyllum Goepperti or the microsporophylls represented by D. fertile and the specimens, associated with D. Berthieri. Renault considers that both sterile and fertile specimens belong to the same genus, which he assigns to a position between Pterido- phytes and Cycads. As Solms-Laubach says, the evidence sup- plied by the structure of the veins of D. Goepperti in favour of a 1 Renault (96) A, p. 267, PI. lxxii. - Solms-Laubach (91) A. p. 126. 3 See Chapter xxxv ^ ZeiUer (06) B. p. 227. 5 Saporta and Marion (85) fig. 37, p. 76. XXX] OTTOKARIA 139 cvcadean alliance is not convincing. The type of vernation is unlike that of any known Cycad or indeed of any Gymnosperm : the large size of the leaves is another though weaker objection to this comparison, as the pinnae of Boivenia (fig. 391) and especially those of some species of Zamia (fig. 388), are of equal or larger dimensions. If, as seems probable, the xylem-strands are mesarch that is a point of contact with recent Cycads, but the bundle as a whole bears but a remote resemblance to that of a cycadean leaf and is much more hke the veins of Ginkgo. The bud shown in fig. 430, A, is probably a young shoot and not merely a large compound leaf. If it were an unexpanded frond of Neuropteris bearing Cyclopteris pinnules we should expect to find indications of scattered desmogen-strands such as would occur in the Myelo- xylon type of rachis. The resemblance to most forms of Cordaites is by no means close though a few leaves referred to that genus (e.g. C. circularis, fig. 468, B) are similar to those of Dolerophyllum^. The male organs are unHke those of any other plant: they may be described as sporophylls with microsporangia or perhaps synangia embedded in the mesophyll and containing microspores similar to those of some Pteridosperms or true Gymnosperms. Attention has been called to the close resemblance of the spores shown in fig. 432, C, D to those recently discovered by Kidston and referred to the genus Whittleseya (fig. 429), and it is very pro- bable that the striking similarity is an index of afiinity. Ottokaria. Zeiller. Ottokaria hengalensis Zeiller. A specimen of doubtful affinity from the Lower Gondwana (Karharbari beds) of Passerabhia, India, was originally described by Zeiller^ as Feistmantelia hengalensis, but in a postscript he substituted the name Ottokaria on the ground that Feistmantelia had previously been employed by Lester Ward. Fig. 433 is drawn from the original specimen: it consists of a stalk attached in a sHghtly excentric position to an almost orbicular lamina, 2-5 cm. in diameter, with subacute marginal teeth and traversed by numerous radially disposed 1 Schmalhausen (87) PL v. figs. 7 — 9 : this specimen, figured as Dolerophyllum Goepperti, is very similar to Cordaites circularis [Grand'Eury (90) A. PI. vi. fig. 15]. 2 ZeiUer (02) B. p. 34, PI. iv. figs. 9, 10. 140 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. striations. Zeiller compares the fossil with Whittleseya elegans and Rhipidopsis ginkgoides and assigns it with some hesitation to the SaKsburieae. An examination of the type-specimen led me to form the opinion that it may be a cupular organ of a Pterido- sperm that enclosed a seed. The lamina is slightly concave and has the form of a shallow cup; moreover the surface-features resemble those of a bract rather than the regularly veined lamina Fig. 433. Ottokaria bengalensis. (Nat. size; drawn from the type-specimen.) of a fohage-leaf. The specimen bears a very close resemblance to one figured by Bertrand^ as the cupule of Hexapterospermum modestae which he connects with fronds of Neuropteris gigantea. Ottokaria occurs in association with fronds of Glossopteris indica and with the large seeds described by Zeiller^ as Cardio- carpus indicus. I have lately obtained some evidence in favour 1 Bertrand, P. (13) p. 131, PI. vii. fig. 6. 2 Zeiller, loc. cit. p. 37. XXX] STKOBILITES 141 of assigning Feistmantel's seeds Carpolithes Milleri^ to the genus Glossopteris : among several specimens from the Lower Gondwana rocks of India I found an example showing a seed partially covered by a scale-leaf in its natural position which appears to be identical with scale-leaves of Glossopteris. It may be that the specimen represented in fig. 433 belongs to Cardiocarpus indicus, though this is a mere guess: my behef is that Ottokaria is a cupular organ that enclosed the base of a seed borne on a Pteridosperm. There is httle doubt that as additional data are obtained it will be found that Pteridosperms played no inconsiderable part in the vegetation of Gondwana Land. Strobilites. Schimper and Mougeot. Strobilites Milleryensis (Renault). This species, from the Permian of France, was placed by Renault in Cycadospadix^, but having regard to the fact that it Fig. 434. Strobilites Milleryensis. (Natural size; after Renault.) difiers essentially in habit from Mesozoic examples of that genus the provisional name Strobilites^ is suggested. The type-specimens are long and narrow spikes or loose strobiH, 8 — 16 cm. long and 2 — 2-6 cm. broad; a stout axis bears spirally disposed bracts 8 — 10 mm. long attached by a slender decurrent pedicel expanded distally into a fan-shaped laciniate lamina with a convex upper 1 Feistmantel (79) B. p. 30; (81) A. p. 59, PI. xxx. fig. 14; (82) B. p. 43, PL XV. figs. 5 — 12. Dr Arber [(05) B. p. 205] has substituted for Carpolithes the more appropriate designation Cardiocarpus. 2 Renault (96) A. p. 329; (93) A. PI. lxxiii. 3 Schimper and Mougeot (44) A. p. 31. Seward (08) B. p. 101. 142 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. face, and there are said to be two seeds attached to the sides of each pedicel (fig. 434). The oval seeds appear to be platy- spermic and resemble Samaropsis fluitans Daws. Two of the strobili figured by Renault are attached at right angles to a second axis, a habit suggesting comparison with that of a large compound frond. Renault is inchned to regard these fertile shoots as cycadean and suggests a possible connexion with the Permian stems Ptychoxylon or Poroxylon, both of which are known to have produced fairly numerous branches. In habit the spikes are similar to some of the longer examples of Cordaianthus, but their preservation is not sufficiently good to afiord accurate information as to the relation of seed to sporophyll. Strohilites Milleryensis is, perhaps, more hkely to be the fertile branch of a compound frond of a Pteridosperm, and it is significant that the seeds have been found in association with Callipteris leaves. COLPOXYLON. Brongniart. Colpoxylon aeduense Brongniart. The genus was founded by Brongniart^ on a piece of stem 15 cm. in diameter from the Permian of the Autun district and regarded by him as a distinct type, with certain resemblances to recent Cycads. A thick section in the British Museum, 13 cm. in diameter (fig. 435, A), illustrates the main anatomical features described by Renault^, to whom our knowledge of the genus is chiefly due. There are two large steles of irregular outhne closely resembhng those of Medullosa Leuckarti (cf. fig. 416, H) ; each consists of a band of secondary xylem with broad medullary rays and a narrow zone of phloem enclosing a central region composed of parenchyma, in which strands of primary tracheids, both reticulate and spiral, pursue a more or less horizontal course, associated with a few small groups of vertical xylem-strands at the inner edge of the secondary wood. The manoxyhc nature of the wood is clearly shown in fig. 436 ; the continuous ink-hne marks the position of the cambium and the dots show the internal protoxylem. Homogeneous parenchyma surrounds the steles and beyond this is crushed tissue containing large secretory canals and nests of stereome 1 Brongniart (49) A. p. 60. 2 Renault (96) A. p. 299; (93) A. Pis. 66, 67. xxxj COLPOXYLON 143 Tig. 435. Colpoxylon aeduense. A. Diagram of a transverse section of a specimen in the British Museum. (V. 9393. ^ nat. size.) B. Stele; much reduced from Renault's figure. C, D. Secretory canal with fibres and collateral vascular bundle (Kidston Coll., 1946). Fig. 436, Colpoxylon aeduense. Transverse section of half of the stem; a, stele of branch. SHghtly enlarged. (Kidston Coll., 1946.) 144 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. fibres either as separate groups or in contact with the canals (fig. 435, C). In the same peripheral tissue occur scattered collateral vascular bundles (fig. 435, D) identical with those of Myeloxylon. The outer cortex of the stem is marked ofi from the more homogeneous inner region by a fairly distinct fine where there is some indication of periderm. The anatomical features are clearly shown in fig. 436, a photograph from a section in Dr Kidston's collection. At a is an imperfectly preserved vascular bundle with a crescentic group of secondary xylem which is probably a leaf -trace that has just emerged from the secondary cyhnder. Renault speaks of these more or less circular strands as possibly connected with reproductive shoots, but it is more probable that they are homologous with the strands in the pericycle and inner cortex of Medullosa and represent leaf- traces before division into smaller collateral strands. Renault describes the stem as possessing seven vascular cylinders in the apical region and suggests branching of the main axis as the cause of the increase in number: there is, however, no evidence to support such correlation. The two steles seen in fig. 435, A, become merged at a lower level into a single stele of sinuous form (fig. 435, B). Beyond the facts furnished by the leaf-trace bundles in the outer cortex and the occurrence of two large scars about 5 cm. in breadth on a stem figured by Renault, we have no positive information as to the form of the leaves or the structure of the reproductive organs. There is httle doubt that the fronds were large and compound like those of most species of Medullosa. There is, however, some slight evidence that Alethopteris Grandini Brongn. and seeds of the Pachytesta type (fig. 497) were borne on Calpoxylon stems; this rests solely on the association in the Loire coal-basin^ of Alethopteris fronds with stems presenting structural resemblances to Colpoxylon aeduense. The striking resemblance between Colpoxylon and Medullosa Leuckarti has led certain authors^ to propose the substitutiojn of 1 Grand'Eury (08) B. p. 1242. 2 Goeppert and Stenzel (81) p. 125; Weber and Sterzel (96) B. p. 79. Solms- Laubach [(97) p. 196] draws attention to the resemblances between the leaf-scars of Colpoxylon and Medullosa. XXX] COLPOXYLON 145 Medullosa for Colpoxylon. The resemblances though close are hardly sufficient to warrant this course. In Colpoxylon the stelar system is simpler ; there is no central region with star- or plate-rings as in Medullosa LeucJcarti but, as in Medullosa anglica, the vascular tissue consists only of large steles without a medullary system. Colpoxylon differs from M. anglica in the reduction in some parts of the stem of the vascular system to a single stele and, moreover, the primary portion of the steles is much more parenchymatous in structure and contains more irregularly anastomosing tracheal strands than is the case in M. anglica. The alteration in the pattern formed by the vascular system at different levels in some MeduUosan stems, especially in Colpo- xylon, may be compared with the varying disposition of the vascular strands in the thick dorsiventral rhizomes of Polypodium heracleum Kunz. and P. quercifolium L. In the rhizome of P. heracleum there are two vascular systems, an outer, cortical, system in the form of a hollow cyhnder composed of a lattice- work with polygonal meshes from which branches are given off to the roots, and a more complex medullary system that is concerned with the emission of leaf-traces. As shown by a series of drawings reproduced in an account by Klein^ of the anatomy of these species of Polypodium, the inner system of steles consists of two cylinders connected towards the upper surface of the stem by a rounded arch of vascular strands; nearer the leaf-base the two cylinders meet and eventually a larger cylinder is produced partly from the upper halves of the two cylinders of the previous section and in part from the connecting arch: the remains of the two smaller cyhnders become connected with the outer vascular system. These and other changes suggest comparison with Colpoxylon as also with the stelar changes in the stem of Ptychoxylon. The comparison cannot be carried beyond the grosser features and is chiefly interesting as affording a further illustration of a similarity in plan between some recent Ferns and extinct Pteridosperms and other Palaeozoic genera. 1 Klein (81) Pis. xxii. — xxiv. 10 146 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. RHEXOXYLON. Bancroft. Rhexoxylon qfricanum Bancroft. The genus Rhexoxylon was instituted for a new type of stem represented by a single incomplete specimen from the Karroo series of South Africa : its precise geological horizon is not known but it may be referred provisionally Fig. 437. Rhexoxylon africanum. Transverse section of stem showing peripheral steles and central (c) stele. (After Bancroft; x 2.) to the lower or Palaeozoic portion of the series. Though our knowledge of the morphological features of the type-species is far from complete owing in part to the method of preservation of the specimen and in part to the destruction of the outer portion XXX] RHEXOXYLON 147 of the vascular tissue and the whole of the cortex. Miss Bancroft's careful description^ demonstrates the existence of characters which justify the employment of a new generic name. Rhexoxylon is more nearly related to the Medulloseae than to any other group and is particularly interesting as the first recorded example of this group from the Southern Hemisphere. Fig. 437 shows a transverse section (7x5 cm.) of the stem. The ground-tissue consists of fairly large-celled parenchyma with sclerous nests and a few bands of periderm. At the periphery of the stem are radially disposed groups of vascular tissue varying in size and to some extent in shape. Unfortunately the stem is incomplete and it is impossible to say how much vascular or other tissue originally existed beyond the present corroded edge. The vascular groups, or steles as they may legitimately be called, follow a vertical course through the length of the block (6-5 cm.) and afford only slight evidence of branching or anastomosing. A close examination of the steles shows that they consist of portions of two series, an inner and outer set ; there is also a curved vascular band in the central ground-tissue (fig. 437, c) and some isolated and scattered patches of vascular elements. Each stele of the inner seiies is made up of two parts, an outer smaller and normally orientated group of secondary xylem and a larger inversely orientated inner group of identical structure. A single stele of the inner series is shown in fig. 438, B, C ; the larger inner portion consists of shghtly divergent rows of tracheids and uniseriate medullary rays and is separated from the smaller portion by a narrow space, a, occupied by crushed tissue which may correspond to the 'partial pith' or primary xylem of a MeduUosan stele. The two groups of xylem are no doubt the products of two cambium arcs, the protoxylem of each group being situated on the flat inner face. The cambium and phloem are represented only by crushed brown cells on the curved outer edge of the xylem. The separate individuahty of the two portions of each stele is indicated not only by the presence of the 'partial pith' but by the discon- tinuity of the tissue at the ends of the narrow space. The tracheids seen at 6, fig. C, are in obHque longitudinal section and are probably being detached to form a leaf-trace. This type of stele may be 1 Bancroft (13). 10—2 148 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. compared with the steles of Medullosa Solmsi (fig. 416, L) but those of Rhexoxylon differ in the lack of continuity of the secondary xylem round the narrow band of crushed primary xylem. The other steles of the inner ring exhibit the same dual nature though with local modifications. In the stele seen in fig. 438, B, there is a close approach to a continuous cylinder of secondary xylem especially on the right-hand side. External to the inner series are several portions of normally orientated secondary xylem-groups (fig. 437) : these probably represent a second series of steles separated from the inner series by a narrow crushed arc of tissue on which the protoxylem strands of the outer groups abut. The xylem of the outer steles agrees in its normal orientation with Fig. 438. Rhexoxylon africanum. A, radial wall of tracheid; B, C, peripheral steles; a, primary portion of stele; 6, lateral strand. (After Bancroft.) the outer and smaller part of the inner steles and, as there is no accompanying group of inversely orientated xylem corresponding to the larger mass of secondary xylem of the inner series, the outer strands are designated partial steles. The central stele consists of two curved irregular bands composed of vertically and obliquely running tracheids: the central part of this stele consists of crushed tissue that probably represents primary xylem like that between the two parts of each of the peripheral steles. Rhexoxylon differs from the usual Medullosan type in the structure of the secondary xylem which is composed of tracheids with an Araucarian form of pitting : there are usually two alternate rows of contiguous pits (fig. 438, A) and occasionally one or three rows. The medullary rays are uniseriate and 3 to 15 cells in depth, a feature characteristic of coniferous wood and not of the wood of the Medulloseae. XXX] SUTCLIFFIA 149 In the absence of more complete information as to the anatomical structure of this stem and of all information as to the leaves or reproductive organs it is impossible to fix with precision the systematic position of the genus. It is, however, clear that Rhexoxylon is closely connected with Medullosa in certain features though in the structure of the wood it exhibits important pecu- liarities. The imperfectly known stem Cladoxylon Kidstoni^ shows a fairly close agreement with the African plant in the form of the steles (fig. 460) but the pitting is scalariform. SUTCLIFFIA. Scott. Sutdiffia insignis Scott. The generic name Sutdiffia was given by Dr Scott^ to a pecuUar type of stem from the Lower Coal Measures of Shore, Lancashire, in recognition of the valuable services rendered to Palaeobotany by the late Mr W. H. SutcHffe, the owner of the colHery from which several new types of plants have been obtained. Two stems are recorded, the type-specimen and a more recently discovered stem, also from Shore, described by Miss de Fraine^, which differs in several particulars from Dr Scott's species. In view of the well-marked pecuharities of the second stem it is convenient to speak of it as /orma jS instead of including it without a distinctive epithet in Sutdiffia insignis. We know nothing of the reproductive organs of the genus. 1. Sutdiffia insignis, forma a. This consists of a piece of stem approximately 12 x 7 cm. in diameter characterised by a broad cortex of parenchyma with secretory sacs and ducts and strands of mechanical tissue (fig. 439, A). Decurrent and massive leaf-bases form a prominent feature as in the stem of Medullosa anglica. The stele, though compressed before petrifaction, was probably not quite cyhndrical but more or less polygonal or broadly triangular in section ; it con- sists of groups of large primary tracheids (350;Lt in diameter) with numerous bordered pits (fig. 439, B, and fig. 440) embedded in an anastomosing system of parenchyma containing scattered secretory sacs, a type of protostele like that of Heterangium and Medullosa 1 Page 205. 2 gcott (06). ^ ^e Fraine (12). 150 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. • b Fig. 439. Sutcliffia insignia Scott. A, B, E, forma a. (After Scott.) C, D, forma j3. (After de Fraine.) The larger black masses are the meristeles; the smaller patches represent bundles derived from the meristeles. B, Longitudinal section of a radially symmetrical bundle from a leaf-base. C. The junction between the primary and secondary xylem. D, Vascular system in transverse section : m, m', meristeles ; s, main stele; e, extra-fascicular strands; It, leaf -traces; c, secondary cortex. E. Vascular bundle from petiole showing a ring of large sieve-tubes surrounding the xylem, and portions of stereome strands. XXX] SUTCLIFFIA 151 anglica except in the possession of exarch protoxylem strands. The metaxylem tracheids contiguous to the external protoxylem elements have a dense spiral or scalariform type of pitting. In the lower part of the stem the primary xylem is enclosed by a cambium which has added a few secondary tracheids (120jLt in diameter), but in the upper part of the specimen the cambium is only partially developed and the addition of secondary xylem has hardly begun (fig. 440). A narrow band of secondary phloem was recognised in places consisting of small-celled parenchyma with some sieve-tubes and medullary rays continuous internally Fig. 440. Sutcliffia insignis. Part of the primary xylem showing on the upper edge the beginning of secondary growth. (Cambridge Botany School, 560.) with the parenchyma of the primary stele. In close association and occasionally in organic connexion with the surface of the stele are several tangentially elongated and large groups of vascular tissue associated with smaller oval strands varying considerably in size. These groups, designated meristeles (Fig. 439, A), are identical in structure with the main stele and are occasionally invested by a feebly developed zone of secondary xylem and phloem. The meristeles are detached at intervals from the parent stele around which they form by anastomoses an irregular network : the larger meristeles give off smaller strands and from these the 152 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. actual leaf-traces are produced by subdivision. It appears, however, that in this type the meristeles are not completely used up in the production of the leaf-traces, portions of them behaving as cauline vascular strands. A protoxylem of a meristele still attached to the central protostele occupies an internal position, and at a higher level, as separation of the meristele is effected, the spiral tracheids occur on the inner face. New meristeles are given off at intervals from the main stele ' to compensate for those parts of the reticulum which were used up in the formation of leaf-trace strands^.' The meristeles form the starting-point for the leaf-traces, an intermediate system between the main stele and the actual leaf- traces ; they differ, therefore, from the parent leaf-traces of Medullosa anglica, which are completely used up by repeated subdivision. Moreover in Sutcliffia the leaf-bundles are concentric and not collateral. A conspicuous feature of the stem oi forma a is the occurrence of two double rows of vascular strands stretching across the cortex (fig. 439, A, a, h). These are interpreted by Scott as downward continuations in the stem of the inner surface of leaf-bases. The outer cortex of the stem and leaf-bases has hypodermal strands of stereome which remain separate or rarely anastomose, and form a superficial zone exactly like that of some species of Medullosa, The leaf-trace bundles may be radially symmetrical or uni- lateral in the arrangement of the xylem which is in all cases completely surrounded by phloem. Fig. 439, B, shows part of a longitudinal section of a large leaf- trace bundle: spiral proto- xylem elements (px) abut on the phloem (ph) and are succeeded to the left by narrow scalariform and large reticulately pitted tracheids. In the larger and radially constructed traces there are several protoxylem-strands distributed over the surface of the xylem, while in the smaller unilateral traces there may be one or two protoxylem strands. A characteristic feature of the xylem of the leaf-traces is the admixture of parenchyma with the tracheids (fig. 439, B, E) and another noteworthy character is the occurrence of large thin-walled tubes in the phloem described by Scott as sieve-tubes and compared with the large sieve-tubes in Marattiaceous leaf -bun dies. Immediately 1 Scott (06) p. 53. XXX] SUTCLIFFIA 153 internal to the hypoderm is a row of leaf-bundles (fig. 439, A) each of which is accompanied by stereome strands. The petioles, which reach a diameter of 12 cm., contain numerous, occasionally anastomosing, concentric bundles. Nothing is known of the fronds as a whole beyond the fact that they are spirally disposed and had decurrent bases of large dimensions in proportion to the stem. Sutcliffia insignis, forma ^. This form, described by Miss de Fraine as Sutcliffia insignis^, is represented by a stem rather smaller than the type-specimen described by Scott, though it is probably an older example of the same species. It is distinguished by a greater development of secondary xylem and phloem both on the main stele and the meristeles; it differs also in the absence of the greater part of the cortex and leaf-bases which have been cut off as the result of the formation of a deep-seated periderm (fig. 439, D, C). The meristeles are smaller and fewer than in the larger form and are distinguished by some other peculiarities. At m' in fig. 439, D, a meristele is seen attached to the main stele. In Sutcliffia insignis forma a the main stele is enclosed by an irregular network of subsidiary steles or meristeles and these form the points of departure of the leaf-traces, but the meristeles are not completely used up in the process of conversion into leaf-traces. In Sutcliffia insignis forma p the meristeles agree in structure with the main stele except in the smaller amount of secondary tissue : they do not, however, form a network as in forma a but occur as strands parallel to the central stele, 'giving off leaf- traces and ultimately dividing up into smaller strands, often unequal in size, the primary wood of the meristeles being entirely used up in the production of radially symmetrical or unilateral bundles.' In this respect, as Miss de Fraine points out, forma P agrees more closely than forma a with Medullosa anglica and supports Scott's view that Sutcliffia is a primitive type of MeduUosan stem. The leaves were given off at fairly long intervals as in some species of Medullosa : the leaf-traces are exarch and similar to those of the type-species. The most striking feature of the new stem is the presence of a 1 de Fraine (12). 154 MEDULLOSEAE [CH, vascular network (fig. 439, D, e) which encloses both the main steles and the meristeles; it consists of extrafascicular strands composed of normally orientated bands of secondary xylem and phloem often assuming a fan-like arrangement and occasionally almost concentric or inversely orientated. These strands are always accompanied by short, usually reticulate, tracheids on the inner margin of the xylem: similar isodiametric tracheids also occur in the pericyclic region. The extrafascicular strands are believed to be secondary structures phylogenetically independent of the meristeles and main stele, comparable with the successive cylinders or arcs of secondary xylem and phloem in some recent Cycads and in some species of Medullosa^. The stele is exarch and roughly triangular; except in the broader zone of secondary tissue it agrees with the protostele oi forma a. The secondary xylem (fig. 439, C) possesses numerous medullary rays 3 — 4 cells broad and of considerable depth: the secondary phloem is characterised by the presence of thick- walled elements, presumably sieve-tubes, like those of Medullosa Leuckarti and M. anglica. The ground-tissue is rich in secretory tissue and the stem- surface, from which the leaf-bases have been detached, is Umited by a wide zone of secondary tissue produced by a phellogen. Sutdiffia Williamsoni (Seward). 1876. Myelopteris (pars) Williamson, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Vol. 166, PL II. figs. 7, 8; PI. iv. fig. 17. 1893. Bachiopteris Williamsoni Seward, Ann. Bot. Vol, vii. p. i. 1894. Bachiopteris Williamsoni Seward, ibid. Vol. viii. p. 207, PL xin. 1906. Sutdiffia Williamsoni Scott, Trans. Linn. Soc. Vol. vii. pt iv. p. 62. In an account of Myelopteris (= Myeloxylon) published in 1876 WilHamson included some sections of petioles from the Lower Coal Measures which I afterwards with his concurrence transferred to the genus Rachiopteris as R. Williamsoni. In Rachiopteris Williamsoni the vascular bundles are concentric and not collateral, and are further distinguished from those of Myeloxylon by the association of parenchyma with the tracheids. ^ Reference should be made to the helpful drawings of models of the vascular system in Miss de Fraine's paper. XXX] SUTCLIFFIA 155 In the arrangement of the bundles and in the structure of the ground-tissue the petioles of Rachiopteris Williamsoni agree with those of Myeloxylon. An outstanding feature of the vascular strands of the former is the occurrence at fairly regular intervals in the peripheral part of the phloem of compara- tively large tubes described by me as secretory canals on the ground that evidence was furnished of their development by the schizogenous separation of cells to form a central canal. The canals were compared with the large sieve-tubes of the Marattia- ceae, but with the qualification that 'their mature form and their manner of development are strongly suggestive of small secretory canals.' Nothing was known as to the stem which bore these petioles until Scott's discovery of Sutcliffia with vascular bundles in the cortex and leaf-bases of the same type as those of Rachio- pteris Williamsoni. As Scott says, there are a few distinguishing features which suggest that R. Williamsoni is not specifically identical with the petioles of Sutcliffia insignis, though the agree- ment is such as to justify the substitution of Sutcliffia for Rachio- pteris. The tubular elements in the phloem which I considered to be secretory canals are regarded by Scott and Miss de Fraine as sieve-tubes. Miss de Fraine gives an excellent summary of our knowledge of the genus and discusses, in the light of the additional facts furnished by the second stem, the position of Sutcliffia in a phylo- genetic series. The new form strengthens the comparison insti- tuted by Scott between Sutcliffia and Medullosa and gives support to a close connexion between the Medulloseae and the Cycadaceae. Scott lays stress on the fact that the Medulloseae, except Sutcliffia, are polystelic, while the Cycads, at least the adult stems, are monostelic. The views of Worsdell and other botanists who beUeve that the Medulloseae and the Cycads are intimately related are discussed on another page: in reference to these views Miss de Fraine adds a caveat as to the danger of attaching excessive importance to evidence based on seedhng anatomy when we are concerned with broad phylogenetic questions. The stele of a cycadean stem may be derived from a protostelic type such as that of Sutcliffia by the gradual disappearance of the internal tracheids : in Sutcliffia, as in some Cycads and species of Medullosa, 156 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. extrafascicular strands and cylinders are a characteristic feature and these may well have arisen independently of the central stele in response to physiological requirements. From such a type as Sutcliffia evolution may have proceeded along two lines; in one direction new types were produced in which increasing com- plexity, as represented by a multiplication of steles, was an outstanding feature. These forms, illustrated by Medullosa anglica and other more elaborate species, proved inefficient and were unproductive. Along another line the protostelic condition was maintained though in some cases extrafascicular strands or cylinders and cortical steles were superadded: it was this line that led to the recent Cycads. General considerations suggested by the anatomical features of Medullosa. A comparison of the stems described under the generic name Medullosa reveals a considerable range in the grosser anatomical features superadded to certain fundamental characters denoting a common origin^. If additional data were available giving us a fuller knowledge of individual plants differences between species would be more clearly defined and would provide adequate grounds for the institution of new genera for some of the types now included in the comprehensive genus Medullosa. A proposal by Dr Lotsy^ to adopt the names Pecopteromedullosa and N eurojpteromedullosa rests primarily on the relatively unimportant difference between the fronds associated with certain Medullosan stems and, as Scott^ points out, this two-fold division if applied to such a species as Medullosa Leuckarti would result in its separation from species which anatomicall}?- are clearly of the same generic type. In Medullosa anglica, one of the oldest and simplest types, there are three steles of equal importance, and each of them is practi- cally identical with the single stele of Heterangium. Each stele^ as indeed all Medullosan steles — consists of a strand of primary xylem enclosed by secondary xylem and phloem, and it is obvious that the development of a constantly increasing cyhnder of ^ For additional figures of the principal types of Medullosa, see Miss Bancroft's paper (14). 2 Lotsy (09) p. 719. 3 Scott (14) p. 998. XXX] MEDULLOSA 157 secondary conducting tissue about three centres would lead to serious mechanical difficulty: a stem constructed on the plan of Medullosa anglica or the smaller M. pusilla could not increase the thickness of its secondary vascular tissue beyond a certain point without detriment to its efficiency. In some types this difficulty is partially overcome by the production of complete concentric cyhnders of centrifugally developed conducting tissue external to an inner system of concentric steles agreeing individually with those of Heterangium (fig. 415, B). Medullosa anglica, regarded from the point of view of the architectural efficiency of its vascular system, affords a much less promising jpoint d'appui for further evolution than some of the forms described under Medullosa stellata in which the mechanical impasse is avoided by the adoption of the cycadean plan as represented by such genera as Cycas and Macrozamia. The Enghsh species Medullosa centrofilis (fig. 417) affords the first example of a characteristic Medullosan feature, namely the presence of a small concentric stele in the central region of the stem : this so-called star-ring differs not only in its smaller dimensions but in its more cyhndrical form from the larger peripheral steles. In the later Permian species, e.g. Medullosa porosa and M. Solmsi, the single star-ring of the older M. centrofilis is replaced by a large number of precisely similar conducting strands. These star-rings are structurally comparable with the cortical steles of Cycas and, in position, with the medullary system of bundles in a Macrozamia \ they are essentially cauline and take no part in the emission of leaf -traces. Medullosa Leuckarti (fig. 416, H) resembles in its vascular plan M. centrofilis, but in this larger stem there are several star-rings and the en- larged peripheral steles are more or less sinuous. In Medullosa Solmsi (fig. 416, E) the star-rings are still more numerous and the main vascular system consists of a double series of con- centric steles, each agreeing with the larger peripheral steles of M. Leuckarti. Some of the forms included in Medullosa stellata appear to be very different from M. anglica and M. Leuckarti (cf. fig. 416, F, A, H), but their similarity is apparent if we imagine Medul- losa anglica with only one main stele (with the addition of star-rings) which is stretched tangentially until it becomes a 158 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. long and narrow plate-ring and is then rolled into a hollow cylinder like that in fig. 416, D. A modification of the tubular type of stele is seen in Medullosa stellata var. corticata (fig. 416, G) in which the vascular cylinder is broken up into two or more curved plate-rings, a change superficially similar to that by which a dictyostele is produced from a solenostele, but in Medullosa it is not the overlapping of leaf-gaps that is the cause of the change. A striking feature in the stem of Medullosa stellata represented in fig. 416, D and F (especially F), is the inequality in breadth of the centrifugal and centripetal xylem: this inequality is an expression of the difficulty caused by the presence of an internal as well as an external addition of secondary conducting tissue. A limit is set to the production of secondary centripetal xylem by the space available for extension, whereas there is unlimited room for increase in the case of the centrifugal tissue. This tendency to a greater development of xylem and phloem on the outer side of the primary portion of the steles is illustrated also in M. Solmsi var. lignosa (fig. 416, L) where the outer of the two series of peripheral steles has a much larger proportion of centrifugal xylem. In M. anglica the secondary xylem on the inner side of the steles is not infrequently broader than the corresponding tissue on the abaxial side^ ; but this is exceptional in the genus. A further development of centrifugal conducting tissue without any corresponding development of centripetal tissue is effected in certain cases (fig. 416, K, L) by the addition of concentric cyhnders of centrifugal xylem and phloem beyond the original concentric steles. The type illustrated by Medullosa Solmsi var. lignosa and M. stellata var. gigantea (fig. 416, L, K) at once suggests comparison with stems of Cycas, Macrozamia, and Encephalartos, the chief difference being the presence in Medullosa of an inner series of concentric steles and a central ground-tissue containing star-rings, though the latter may be regarded as corresponding to the medullary system of bundles in Macrozamia. In Macro- zamia the central region of the stem is considered to be the pith of a monostehc stem, whereas in Medullosa the stem is polystelic. In recent cycadean stems it is not uncommon to find patches of inversely orientated xylem and phloem internal to one or more 1 Scott (99) p. 89. XXX] MEDULLOSA 159 of the cylinders of centrifugal vascular tissue. These abnormal developments are considered by Worsdell^ to be relics of the inner portions of concentric steles possessed by the Medullosan ancestors of recent Cycads. This interpretation affords a means of bringing into closer relationship the polysteUc Medulloseae and the mono- stehc Cycadaceae, the apparent simphcity of the latter being the result of the progressive loss of centripetal xylem and phloem, the normal cycadean cylinder being therefore regarded as a one- •sided remnant of a concentric Medullosan stele. In other words, the Cycads are descended from polystehc ancestors. As further evidence in support of this view Worsdell points to the occurrence of concentric steles in the cortex of Cycas and their occasional presence in the pith of other genera. Matte^ has shown that in the seedling stem of Encephalartos Barteri (fig. 396, K) there are three concentric steles each similar to a normal Medullosan stele : at a higher level in the axis the steles become 'unrolled' and assume the form of one-sided cyhnders of centrifugal xylem and phloem. In the peduncles of some recent Cycads, e.g. Stangeria, there is a tendency towards a somewhat irregular orientation of the collateral bundles that constitute the vascular cyHnder, and tracheids occasionally occur internal to the protoxylem of the individual bundles^. Worsdell regards these features as evidence of a Medullosan ancestry. If the sinuous plate-rings of a stem of Medullosa Leucharti (fig. 416, H) were broken up into separate portions and wholly or in part deprived of the centripetal xylem, the result would be an arrangement of bundles comparable with that in a Stangeria peduncle*. The scattered centripetal tracheids discovered by Scott in Stangeria and other cycadean peduncles are interpreted by Scott and by Worsdell as rehcs of some ancestral centripetal xylem, but with this important difference in the point of view ; Scott believes that they represent the almost completely aborted centripetal xylem of a single stele like that of Lyginojpteris , while Worsdell sees in them fragmentary vestiges of the central primary xylem of two or more Medullosan steles. 1 Worsdell (96); (98); (00); (06) etc. 2 Matte (04); (08). See also Bancroft (14); Dorety (09). 3 Scott (97). * WorsdeU (06). 160 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. An abnormal seedling of Araucaria Bidwillii described by Shaw^ exhibits features analogous to those in some cycadean seedlings: within the normal stele a cambium forms an inversely orientated vascular cylinder which at a lower level becomes continuous with the outer centrifugal tissue, the whole vascular system being eventually represented by two concentric steles. The polystelic stage is a development of a monostelic condition, and the inner or inverted portion of each of the two concentric steles is derived from an inversely orientated cylinder in the central region of the root. This abnormal root does not, however, supply an argument in favour of the derivation of a monostelic type of stem from one that was polystelic, but it shows a close relation between the two plans in one organ. The seedling is not altogether normal in form apart from structure and it is not improbable that the ana- tomical abnormality is connected with some pathological cause. It has been suggested^ that Worsdell attaches too much phylogenetic significance to the irregularities in the disposition and form of the vascular bundles in the peduncle of Stangeria, and the criticism that insufficient allowance is made for the possible reaction on structure of the special physiological require- ments of reproductive shoots is well founded. Granting an overestimate of the arguments drawn from the occasional occur- rence of concentric vascular strands, a considerable body of evidence remains in favour of Worsdell's main contention. Mrs Thoday^ has drawn attention to certain features exhibited by the inflorescence-axes of Welwitschia, particularly the occur- rence of concentric and inversely orientated bundles, similar to those characteristic of the seedling of Cycas siamensis^ described by Matte, and to anatomical characters occasionally present in adult cycadean stems and normally represented in Medullosa. She is of opinion that the occurrence in Welwitschia of certain Medullosan features has a phylogenetic significance. The dif- ferences between the Gnetales, Medulloseae, and Cycadales are considerable, and it would seem unlikely that the anatomical resemblances described by Mrs Thoday are of great value as criteria of close relationship. The comparison of Lagenostoma with 1 Shaw (09). 2 de Frame (12) p. 1060. 3 Sykes, M. G. (lO^); (10). ^ Matte (04) Pis. xv. xvi. XXX] MEDTJLLOSA 161 gnetalean seeds is alluded to elsewhere. To the statement that the presence of concentric and inversely orientated steles in Welwitschia are reminiscent of the polystelic Medulloseae, Mrs Thoday adds the qualifying remark that the occurrence of four concentric groups of vascular tissue in the hypocotyl of Welwitschia is not sufficient to justify the conclusion that the ancestral type was polystelic. This reservation accords with the contention of Scott and other botanists, that the occasional occurrence in cycadean seedlings and adult stems of anatomical features sug- gestive of polystely does not in itself furnish an adequate reason for doubting that the apparent monostely of Cycads is phylo- genetically what it seems to be, namely, an indication of monostehc ancestry. This brings us to the question of a possible mono- stehc ancestor. It may be that the Upper Carboniferous genus Sutcliffia affords a clue to the problem of the origin of the polystelic type illustrated in various forms by Medullosa. The protostele of Sutcliffia bears a close resemblance to each of the three steles of Medullosa anglica; the fact that Sutcliffia is exarch and that' Medullosa anglica has mesarch xylem is of secondary importance,, particularly as exarchy is represented within the genus Medullosa^ The extrafascicular strands of xylem and phloem and the accessory strands are points in which Sutcliffia and Medullosa anglica agree and, as Miss de Fraine^ adds, the meristeles of Sutcliffia may be homologous with the leaf-trace strands of Medullosa. Scott^ gave expression to the characters shared by these two types by describing Sutcliffia as the most primitive of the Medulloseae. It is suggested that the protostelic axis of Sutcliffia may be regarded as the starting-point of the monostelic Cycads, the central mass of tracheal tissue being replaced by a parenchymatous pith, while the extrafascicular and accessory strands arose independently of the central stele in response to increased physiological demands consequent on the increase in size of the stem. From the same starting-point evolution may have progressed along another fine through such a type as Medullosa anglica leading to the more complex Permian species of Medullosa. Chodat's view^ that the Medulloseae are Protocycadaceae, if we include Sutcliffia as well 1 de Fraine (12). 2 gcott (08) p. 04 3 Chodat (08) B. p. 38. s. m 11 162 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. as Medullosa in the Medulloseae, is probably correct. There is clear evidence of a close bond of union between recent Cycads and the MeduUoseae, and Sutcliffia offers a possible means of deriving complex polystelic types from a monostelic ancestor. Worsdell's opinion^ that the stele of Lyginopteris affords evidence of derivation from a polystelic ancestor and is not homo- logous with the true monostele of Heterangium is opposed to the undoubted signs of intimate connexion exhibited by these genera. The Lyginopterideae are, as Scott^ says, a less advanced group than the MeduUoseae and, it may be added, they are more remote from the modern representatives of the Cycadales. The Lygino- pterideae and the MeduUoseae are probably offshoots of a common stock, but the MeduUoseae occupy a position farther removed from the fihcinean ancestry than Heterangium and Lyginopteris^. The relative meagreness of our knowledge of the reproductive organs of the MeduUoseae gives precedence to anatomical data in phylogenetic considerations, but the evidence furnished by Trigonocarpus and other seeds that may fairly be assigned to MeduUosan plants is in harmony with the conclusions based on vegetative characters with regard to a close afl&nity between the MeduUoseae and Cycads. The comparative examination of recent Cycads naturally suggested by any attempt to compare the group as a whole with Palaeozoic types leads to some apparently contradictory results. The habit of the megasporophyll of Cycas is usually quoted as a primitive attribute : the close resemblance in plan and in manner of occurrence on the stem between megasporophylls and foliage leaves recalls both Ferns and MeduUosan fronds. On the other hand the production of eight body-cells in the pollen-tube of Microcycas^ in place of the usual single cell may also be regarded as a primitive character. It is perhaps possible, as Miss Dorety^ «ays, that the polyspermy may be a case of recurrence and not a direct inheritance. Microcycas differs from Cycas in having only one vascular cylinder, and if the presence of several concentric 1 Worsdell (06) pp. 140 et seq. 2 gcott (09) B. p. 464. 3 For a general summary of ' Pt^ridosperm anatomy and its relation to that of the Cycads' see Bancroft (14). * See p. 6. ^ Dorety (09^) p. 144. xxx] STELOXYLON 163 cylinders in Cycas be interpreted as an indication of a closer con- nexion with a Medullosan ancestry, the Microcycas type would represent a more advanced stage in evolution. Attempts to arrange plants according to a natural sequence are frequently frustrated by instances of unequal progress in the development of vegetative and reproductive organs ; one or other set of members lags behind; some characters point to the retention of primitive traits while others indicate a marked progressive tendency. It is noteworthy that the Mesozoic Bennettitales are characterised by a greater simplicity of stem-structure than is the rule in recent Cycads, and both in their vegetative features and in the structure of the seeds they are further removed from the Medullosan type. II. A. STELOXYLEAE. Steloxylon. Solms-Laubach. Steloxylon Ludwigii (Goeppert and Stenzel). The genus is founded on a piece of stem from Siberia, possibly of Permian Tig. 441. Steloxylon Ludwigii. A, surface-view (longitudinal) of stem showing leaf -bases. (After Solms-Laubach.) B, longitudinal section showing anasto- mosing vascular strands. C, steles, the lower one showing the emission of a leaf -trace. (B, C, after Schenk.) age though not improbably older, which was originally de- scribed as MeduUosa Ludwigii^, It is characterised by numerous 1 Goeppert and Stenzel (81) p. 126, PI. xvii. 11—2 164 MEDULLOSEAE [CH. cylindrical and band-like vascular strands forming an irregular anastomosing system (fig. 441, B) and by crowded spiral leaf- scars on the exposed face. The appearance presented by the transverse section figured by these authors, while suggesting comparison with Medullosa, reveals a distinctive character, namely the absence of a definite peripheral system of vascular rings such as forms a striking feature of the continental MeduUosae. A more complete description was afterwards pubhshed by Schenk^ who recognised more fully the pecuhar features and hinted at the possibihty that the species might more appropriately be regarded as a member of a distinct group. Solms-Laubach^ went a step further and instituted the generic name Steloxylon, and in a later publication gave a fuller account of the anatomical characters. The complete stem must have reached a diameter of approximately 13 cm. The homogeneous ground-tissue forms a matrix enclosing an anastomosing vascular system of cylindrical or oval steles (fig. 441, C). Each strand consists of a band of secondary xylem tracheids with one or several rows of circular or oval bordered pits on the radial walls and narrow medullary rays usually 1 — 2 cells broad and 1 — 4 cells deep, though occasionally deeper. No phloem is preserved. The tissue in the centre of each stele is very imperfectly preserved, but it is clear that the secondary xylem enclosed a central region ('partial pith') Hke that in the steles of a Medullosa, doubtless consisting of primary xylem and conjunctive parenchyma. The stem is covered with leaf-bases of oval or circular section and between them are small organs, probably multicellular hairs (fig. 441, A). A leaf-base consists of an outer zone of strengthening tissue and a parenchymatous ground-tissue traversed by two or more small vascular strands which assume various forms. These petiolar strands are simply portions of the main vascular system which bend outwards at the periphery of the anastomosing network. The more noteworthy features in which Steloxylon differs from Medullosa, particularly such species as M. stellata and M. Leucharti, are (i) the crowded and comparatively small leaf-bases in place of the massive decurrent petioles of Medullosa) (ii) the supply 1 Schenk (89) p. 525, PI. i. figs. 1—16. « Solms-Laubach (96) B. p. 62; (97) p. 197; (10) p. 542, PI. iii. fig. 9. XXX] STELOXYLON 165 of the leaves by compact branches of the stelar network instead of the bundles detached as leaf-traces from a stem-stele of Medullosa (the origin of a leaf-trace in Steloxylon is shown in fig. 441, C) ; (iii) the absence of a peripheral system of vascular plate-rings and the irregular distribution of cyhndrical and plate- steles in the ground-tissue. Nothing is known of the reproductive organs or leaves beyond the structure of the attached leaf-bases. The opinion expressed by P. Bertrand^ that the fossil described by Stenzel as Aster ochlaena {Clepsydropsis) kirgisica is the petiole of Steloxylon was abandoned after the additional facts published by Solms-Laubach. As regards the affinities of Steloxylon: the structure of the steles agrees closely with that of the star- and plate-rings of a Medullosa, while the pitting of the tracheids is more like that in Medullosa than Cladoxylon. In the tendency to a more radial than tangential disposition of the band-like steles Steloxylon recalls Cladoxylon rather than Medullosa, but in Cladoxylon the vascular system does not form an irregular network as in Steloxylon. The information as to the structure of the primary xylem is very meagre, but it points to a closer connexion with Medullosa than with Cladoxylon. On the whole Steloxylon may perhaps be defined as a genus alHed to the MeduUoseae in the anatomical features of the stem more closely than to other genera, but suffi- ciently distinct to be excluded from the MeduUoseae as at present understood ^. 1 P. Bertrand (08); (11) p. 47 (footnote). 2 In a recent note on Steloxylon to which Dr Scott has drawn my attention Bertrand records the genus from Saalfeld (Upper Devonian) and expresses the opinion that Steloxylon may be a condition of Cladoxylon and not a distinct type — • P. Bertrand (14) p. 448. CHAPTER XXXI. PTERIDOSPERMS REPRESENTED BY SEED-BEARING LEAVES ONLY OR LEAVES IN CONSTANT ASSOCIATION WITH SEEDS. Before describing other genera represented by petrified vegetative organs exhibiting in their anatomical features points of contact with the MeduUoseae, a short account is intercalated of some imperfectly known seed-bearing fronds and seeds belonging to the Pteridosperms but which do not afford sufficient data to admit of their reference to a more precise position in a natural classification. Pecofteris Pluckeneti (Schlotheim). In the section in Volume ii. devoted to the genus Pecopteris reference was made to the species P. Pluckeneti^, further treatment being deferred until other Pteridosperms had been described. The fern-like fronds originally described by Schlotheim as Filicites Pluckeneti'^ and afterwards transferred by Brongniart and other authors to Pecopteris^ are now recognised as the leaves of a Pteridosperm. Some doubt has been expressed as to the specific identity of the specimens figured by Schlotheim and Brongniart respectively, but Potonie's examination of the type-specimen of the earlier author convinced him that Brongniart's leaves were correctly named. The large fronds of Pecopteris Pluckeneti are characterised by the bifurcation of the principal axis which bears opposite pairs of bi- or tri-pinnate branches and in the angles of the bifurcations of the rachis undeveloped buds occur on prolonga- tions of the axis, a habit recalling recent species of Gleichenia^ 1 Vol. II. p. 576. 2 Schlotheim (04) A. PI. x, fig. 19. 2 For synonomy, see Kidston (86) A. p. 125 and Potonie (93) A. p. 81. 4 Sterzel (83); (86^) B.; ZeiUer (06) B. p. 60. CH. XXXl] PECOPTERIS PLUCKENETI 167 (figs. 225 and 226, vol. ii.). The variation in the form of the pinnules is shown in fig. 442, A, which represents both the apical portion and parts of pinnae 10 cm. lower on the rachis of a large leaf from the Coal Measures of Radstock. The species is character- istic of the Upper Coal Measures and is recorded also from Permian strata. In 1883 Sterzel adopted for this species the generic name DicJcsonites because of the occurrence of shallow circular cups at the end of the lowest lateral vein on some of the pinnules which he believed to be sori of the Cyatheaceous type. The cups Fig. 442. Pecoj^teris Pluckeneti. A, apex and lower pinnae (Kidston Coll., 234); B, pinnule with supposed sorus (after Sterzel); C, pinnule with seeds (after Zeiller). have an involute margin and occasionally a small scar in the centre (fig. 442, B). Stur^ declined to accept Sterzel's evidence as satisfactory and suggested a fungal origin for the sorus-like impressions, a view, as Sterzel objected, that is rendered improbable by the constant position of the single cups on several pinnules. The nature of Sterzel's 'sori' has not been demonstrated: it is suggested by Grand' Eury^ that they mark the position of micro- 1 Stur (85) B. p. 293. ^ Qrand'Eury (05). 168 PTERIDOSPERMS [CH. Sporangia. Some seed-bearing specimens in Dr Kidston's collec- tion show cups, like those figured by Sterzel, on pinnules from which the seeds have fallen, and it is not improbable that they are the scars of seeds. In 1905 Grand' Eury published a description and photographs of specimens of P. Pluckeneti from the St ^Etienne coal-field showing hundreds of well-preserved seeds, many of them attached to pinnules characterised by a very shghtly reduced lamina. Some fronds were found to be entirely fertile, while others bore both sterile and fertile pinnae. The smallest seeds, 5 mm. long and 3 mm. broad, were found at the tips of unexpanded leaves: the mature seeds, only slightly larger, agree in their broadly oval form and narrow marginal ' wing ' with small examples of Samarofsis^. The seeds were figured by Grand' Eury ^ in an earlier work as Carpolithes granulatus. They are believed to have hung free from the lamina, a conclusion based on the position of the seeds relative to the plane of the pinnule in well-preserved examples. Prof. Zeiller informs me that he is by no means certain that Grand' Eury's seed-bearing fronds should not be referred to Pecopteris Sterzeli ; but as that species and P. Pluckeneti are very closely allied forms and may well have borne the same general type of fructification, the question of specific difference does not affect the significance of Grand'Eury's discovery. A statement was made in vol. ii.^, quoted from Grand'Eury, that the fronds of P. Sterzeli were borne on a Psaronius stem, but Prof. Zeiller told me that in his opinion the fronds and stem are merely in association and not in organic contact. It is probable that the Psaronius stem bore fronds of some species of Pecofteris with sori of the Asterotheca or Scolecofteris type and not seeds. Pecopteris Pluckeneti and P. Sterzeli are no doubt the fronds of a Pteridosperm *, but apart from the seed-impressions there is no evidence as to the nature of the reproductive organs or stem. The form of the seeds with a fairly thick sarcotesta, which gives them a winged appearance, suggests a member of the Medulloseae rather than a plant with seeds like those of Lyginofteris and Heterangium. 1 See also Zeiller (05) B. p. 725. 2 Grand'Eury (77) A. PI. xxxiii. fig. 7. ^ Vol. ii. p. 419, fig. 297. 4 Zeiller (06) B. p. 63. XXXl] EREMOPTERIS ARTEMISAEFOLIA 169 Eremo'pteris artemisaefolia Sternberg with Samaropsisacuta Lindley and Hutton. The generic name Eremopteris was instituted by Schimper for a type of frond from the Coal Measures of Newcastle described by Sternberg as Sphenopteris artemisaefolia. He included also a second species, E. Neesii, from the Permian of Bohemia: this was remoyed by Zeiller to Callipteris. The type-species of Eremopteris is included in this chapter on the ground that the almost constant association with the fronds of seeds comparable with those described by White as Aneimites {Wardia) fertilis affords a strong argument in favour of assigning Eremopteris artemisaefolia to the Pteridosperms. 1826. Sphenopteris artemisaefolia Sternberg, Flor. Vorwelt, Fasc iv. p. 15, PI. LVI. fig. 1. 1833. Sphenopteris crithmifolia Lindley and Hutton, Foss. Flor. Vol. I. PI. XL VI. 1833. Cardiocarpon acutum. Ibid. PI. Lxxvi. 1869. Eremopteris artemisaefolia Schimper, Trait. Pal. V6g. Vol. i. p. 416. 1914. Samaropsis acuta Kidston, Trans. R. Soc. Edinb. Vol. l. Pt i. p. 156. The large compound fronds of this species^ are characterised by the regular dichotomy of the main branches, a feature frequently met with in Palaeozoic fern-like leaves : the cuneate or oval- cuneiform pinnules (fig. 443, A, C) vary considerably in breadth from the typical cuneate type of segment as figured by Brongniart^ to narrow, almost linear, leaflets like those of Sphenopteris crithmi- folia. Several spreading veins traverse the lamina. Lindley and Hutton, while admitting a very close resemblance between their species and S. artemisaefolia, adopted a distinctive name. The only evidence so far obtained as to the stem of the plant is furnished by some specimens in the Hutton collection (Newcastle- upon-Tyne) one of which shows a piece of rhizome bearing several petioles (fig. 443, B) : there are no pinnules attached to the rachises but some occur in close association. Brongniart noticed the frequent association of Eremopteris fronds with small seeds, but he regarded it as accidental. Dr Kidston^ has recently 1 For a more complete synonymy, see Kidston (03) B. p. 770. 2 Brongniart (28^) A. Pis. xlvi., xlvii. ; Lebour (77) Pis. xxxiii, — rv. 3 Kidston (14) p. 156; Duns (72). 170 PTERIDO SPERMS [CH. drawn attention to a note by Prof. Dans published in 1872 on the juxtaposition of seeds and fronds, and Mr Howse^ in his Catalogue of the Hutton plants considers that the seeds were borne on the Eremofteris leaves ; in his synonymy of E. artemisae- folia he includes Cardiocarpon acutum Lind. and Hutt. as the * spore-cases or sporangia.' The Eremopteris seeds are of the platyspermic (Samaropsis) type, broadly oval and about 7 mm. Fig. 443. Eremopteris artemisaefolia. A, part of a frond with associated seeds of Samaropsis acuta; B, rhizome with fragments of fronds; C, pinnule. (Drawn by Mr L. D. Sayers from specimens in the Hutton Collection, New- castle. A, B, f nat. size.) long with an obtuse base and two slightly divergent acute processes at the apex (fig. 444). Some specimens in Dr Kidston's collection from the Lower Coal Measures of Midlothian, which were associated with Eremopteris fronds, are preserved as mummified cuticular membranes and on microscopical examination they show clearly the presence of a pollen-chamber. The seeds are of the Sama- ropsis type. The drawings reproduced in fig. 444 were made for me by Dr Kidston from two specimens, in his collection, 1 Howse (88) p. 45. xxxi] SAMAROPSIS 171 of exceptionally well-preserved seeds from Midlothian: the seeds of this species vary considerably in size and form; some are almost orbicular and show no distinction between nucule and border (fig. 444, A) while in others (B) the impression of the flattened and longitudinally striated sarcotesta is clearly distin- guished. Kids ton is of opinion that in younger seeds there is a single apical point replaced in a later stage of development by two cusps, as seen in figs. A and B, formed by the opening of the micropylar tube. A ridge in the middle of the flattened surface indicates the position of the vascular bundles in the principal plane as in Cardiocarpus. The fully developed seeds are 8 — 9 mm. long. The correlation of the seeds represented in figs. 443 and 444 with Eremofteris fronds furnishes an additional illustration Fig. 444. Samaropsis acuta. (From drawings by Dr Kidston of specimens in his collection, 3475 (A), 3316 (B); x 2.) of the impossibility of trusting to external form as a criterion of affinity, for it is known that seeds of the Samaropsis type were produced by Pteridosperms with foliage represented by Eremofteris artemisaefolia and Pecopteris PlucJceneti, also by some members of the Cordaitales {e.g. fig. 480). Dr Arber^ has recently proposed a new generic name Cornucarpus for Cardiocarpon acutum, but the drawings that he gives of seeds from the Kent coal-field referred to this species suggest a type distinct from that of Lindley and Hutton. In the absence of specimens showing actual attach- ment it is impossible to say how the seeds were borne, but the analogy of Wardia fertilis and Pecopteris PlucJceneti lends support to the view that the seeds were attached to pinnules with a reduced lamina. Eremopteris artemisaefolia occurs in the Lower and Middle Coal Measures of England: a species recorded by 1 Arber, E. A. N. (14) p. 97; (09) p. 29, PI. i. fig. 5. 172 PTERIDOSPERMS [CH. Kidston from the Calciferous sandstone of Scotland as E. Mac- conochii^ is now believed by that author to be generically distinct^. With the exception of the unsatisfactory specimen reproduced in fig. 443, B, we have no information with regard to the habit of the stem to which the Eremofteris leaves were attached. WARDIA. White. Wardia fertilis (White). Another example of a fern-like frond bearing seeds is afforded by specimens from the Lower Fig. 445. Wardia fertilis (White), A, sterile portion of frond; B, D, enlarged pinnules; C, seed. (After White. A, ca, nat. size; B — D, x 2.) Pottsville series of Virginia (correlated with the Millstone grit of British geologists) described by Mr David White^ as Aneimites {Wardia) fertilis. The compound fronds usually referred to the 1 Kidston (83) B. p. 540, PL xxxii. fig. 3. 2 White refers some fronds from the Missouri Coal Measures to Eremopteris, but their generic identity with the type-species is open to doubt. White (99)B. p. 16. 3 White (04) B. XXXl] WARD I A 173 genus Adiantides or Adiantites'^ are characterised by cuneate pinnules with a thin lamina and forked, slightly divergent veins (fig. 445, A, D). White discards the name Adiantides in favour of Dawson's genus Aneimites on the ground that Goeppert^, who instituted the former term, applied it in the first instance to leaves of Ginkgo which he identified as simple Fern fronds. In spite of this misapplication of the name it has been constantly used and is well established. The discovery of seeds is, however, a reason for the adoption of a new generic name, and as White proposed Wardia for the seeds it may appropriately be extended to the fronds in place of the provisional term Aneimites. The seeds which occur at the apices of slender pedicels on pinnae bearing relatively small pinnules with a reduced lamina (fig. 445, B, C) are rhomboidal in shape, 4-5 mm. long and 2-5 mm. broad. The bilaterally symmetrical seeds were probably enclosed, as White suggests, in a fleshy integument which on pressure became laterally extended as a wing-like border. In some of the seeds there is an indication of a 'slight collapse within the apex of the nutlet,' which may mean the presence of a pollen-chamber; but while the preservation is too imperfect to afford any decisive evidence as to anatomical features, there is no reason to doubt the conclusion as to the seed-nature of the organs described by White. Nothing is known of the stem, though the opinion may be hazarded that Wardia is a member of the Medulloseae. Adiantites hellidulus Heer and Lagenosfermum Arheri Nathorst. Reference is made to the genus Lagenosfermiim in the account of Lagenostoma^. The species Lagenosfermum Arheri has recently been founded by Dr Nathorst* on some seeds obtained from Lower Carboniferous rocks in Spitzbergen : a brief description is intercalated here because it is probable that they were borne on fronds of the Adiantites type similar to those on which White found the seeds described by him as Wardia. The seeds of L. Arheri, 14 — 18 x 5 mm., are spindle-shaped with an obtuse apex and longitudinally ribbed with a stalk at least 7 mm. long. Nathorst considers that a cupule was probably present: the 1 Vol. II. p. 376. 2 Goeppert (362) a. p. 216. 3 See page 64. * Nathorst (14) p. 30, PI. xv. figs. 18, 60—68. 174 PTERIDOSPERMS [CH. XXXI specimens do not convey the impression of naked seeds and in some examples there are indications of an investing envelope, though this may be the result of tearing of the testa. Nathorst regards the Spitzbergen seeds as probably specifically identical with a specimen described by Schmalhausen^ from Carboniferous rocks in the Urals as Rhahdocarfus orientalis Eich., a species which agrees closely with Lagenospermum nitidulum as described by Heer^ (under the name Carfolithes nitidulus) and Nathorst^ from Spitzbergen. It is also possible that Kids ton's Rhahdocarfus elongatus*, from the Lanarkshire coal-field and elsewhere, recently transferred by Arber^ to Platyspermtim, is an example of the same species. The chief interest of Lagenosfermum lies in the fact, assuming Nathorst's correlation of the seeds with Adiantites belliduhis Heer to be correct, that it is a typical radiospermic seed, while Wardia, borne on foliage of the same general type, is an equally typical platyspermic seed. 1 Schmalhausen (83) PI. iv. figs. 13—15. 2 Heer (77) A. PI. v. pp. 23—25. 3 Nathorst (14) p. 30, PL xv. fig. 59. ^ Kidston (86) p. 70, PI m. fig. 6. 5 Arber, E. A. N. (14) p. 96, Pi. vi. fig. 12. CHAPTER XXXII. CYCADOFILICES. In this chapter are included several types represented by stems, but which in the absence of definite information with regard to the reproductive organs cannot be assigned to the Pteridosperms. MEGALOXYLEAE. Megaloxylon. Seward. This genus is represented by a single species founded on a piece of stem from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire discovered in the Binney Collection in the Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge^. Nothing is known as to the leaves, reproductive organs, or roots. The type-specimen consists exclusively of primary and secondary xylem. Megaloxylon Scotti Seward. The type-specimen, reproduced natural size in fig. 446, A, B, consists of a fragment of stem which at first sight bears a close resemblance to Cordaites, but the apparent pith, 1-9 cm. in diameter, is the primary xylem of the stele and is enclosed by an incomplete cylinder of secondary xylem 2 cm. broad. The distinction between the lighter primary xylem and the darker secondary cylinder is especially well marked in the longitudinal section (fig. 446, B). The central region, shown on a larger scale in fig. 447, is occupied by groups of tracheids varying in size and shape associated with thin- walled parenchyma: the latter is represented by lighter patches in the section. The majority of the tracheids are characterised by their great breadth — in some 1 Seward (99) B. 176 MEGALOXYLEAE [CH. cases -4 mm. — and their iso-diametric or even horizontally elongated and flattened form. Some of these large metaxylem elements are seen in longitudinal section at m in fig. 448 where the shrinkage and partial decay of the parenchymatous tissue have resulted in the separation of transverse bands of xylem A B \t^ Fig. 446. Megaloxylon Scotti. A, B. Transverse and longitudinal sections. x^, x^, primary and secondary xylem ; It, leaf-traces. Nat. size. C. Secondary xylem. simulating the discoid pith of a Cordaites. The walls of these tracheal cells are covered with multiseriate pits. With the short and sometimes flattened xylem elements occur others of greater length, but these are chiefly met with in the more peri- pheral part of the central region where some of the tracheids are XXXII] MEGALOXYLOX 177 :tt2 Fig. 447. Megaloxylon Scotti. Transverse section of the primary portion^of the stele with leaf-traces, It, and the inner edge of the secondary xylem. S. Ill 12 178 MEGALOXYLEAE CH. much narrower and have the form of ordinary water-conducting elements. On one side of the primary xylem in fig. 447 an oval and more compact group of narrow and longer tracheids is seen at It^; this is a leaf-trace about to enter the secondary- xylem Fig. 448. Megaloxylon Scotti. A, transverse section at the janction of the primary and secondary tissues; B. longitudinal section showing the inner edge of the secondary xylem, x^, a, leaf -trace, It, and the metaxylem, m, cylinder on its outward course. The same leaf-trace is shown at It in fig. 446, B ; as it descends the trace becomes less distinct and its elongated elements gradually merge into the general mass of metaxylem. A portion of this leaf -trace is seen in fig. XXXIl] MEGALOXYLON 179 448, B, It, close to the inner edge of the secondary xylem, x^, and abutting internally on the contracted tissue, m, which consists mainly of large and short tracheae with remains of associated parenchyma. The trace includes some conjunctive parenchyma interspersed with the tracheids: on its outer surface, that is on the abaxial edge of the ovate xylem strand as shown at It^ in fig. 447, there are six external protoxylem strands. In the peri- pheral region of the primary xylem of the section reproduced in fig. 447 there are several more or less well-defined leaf-traces, e.g. It^, U^; these differ from that seen at It^ in their greater tangential breadth and in the less compact arrangement of the tracheids. As each trace is followed downwards in the primary region of the stele it tends to become broader, especially in a tangential direction; the spiral protoxylem strands are more widely separated (fig. 448, A, px) and the elongated and com- paratively narrow tracheids as they spread out fan-wise are reduced in length, finally passing over into the broad and short reticulately pitted cells. Each leaf -trace can be followed through approximately four internodes before its individuality is lost in the general mass of metaxylem. The disposition of the peri- pheral traces is such as to justify the conclusion that the phyllo- taxis of the stem is f.^ The secondary xylem (fig. 446, C) resembles that of Lyginopteris and Heterangium though it is less parenchymatous. The medullary rays are numerous and vary in breadth from 1 to 5 cells, while the tracheids, with multiseriate bordered pits on their radial walls, form bands 1 to 8 elements in breadth. There are no regular rings of growth but occasional arcs of narrow tracheids interfere slightly with the otherwise uniform structure of the wood. A leaf-trace in its oblique outward course through the wood becomes completely enclosed by a cylinder of secondary xylem and thus appears to be concentric. Owing to the absence of any tissue external to the secondary xylem of the stem, statements as to the subsequent behaviour of the leaf-traces on emerging from the stele are purely hypothetical. It is, however, not improbable that each concentric trace lost its secondary tissue 1 For additional figures, see Seward (99) B. 12—2 180 MEGALOXYLEAE [CH. and broke up into several collateral strands, a suggestion based on the behaviour of the leaf -traces in Medullosa anglica. The most striking characteristics of Megaloxylon are: (i) the structure of the primary xylem, particularly the unusual form of the majority of the metaxylem tracheids, a form obviously correlated with storage rather than with conduction of water; (ii) the gradual spreading of the leaf-traces and their absorption as they descend into the main mass of the xylem ; (iii) the exarch structure of the primary xylem. Confining our attention to the primary region of the stele; a comparison is at once suggested with Heterangium. In Megaloxylon the peculiarities are the substitution of the large storage-tracheids for the normal xylem- elements; the greater irregularity in the groups of metaxylem; and an exarch instead of a mesarch structure. In these last features the primary xylem agrees with that of recent species of the Schizaeaceous Fern Lygodium and the external protoxylem is a character shared with Rhetinangium. The occurrence of short tracheids similar to those of Megaloxylon in the inner portion of the stele of the Osmundaceous Fern Zalesskya gracilis (Eich.)^ may be quoted as an example of parallel modification but, as Scott^ points out, the resemblance has no phylogenetic signi- ficance. The secondary xylem though less parenchymatous than in recent Cycads agrees more closely with the manoxylic than with the pycnoxylic type. Megaloxylon affords an interesting example of a combination of primary stelar anatomical features, comparable in the exarch position of the protoxylem with the stele of Lygodium, and secondary wood similar to that of Lyginopteris and Heterangium. The large metaxylem tracheids may be regarded as derivatives of elements which in some ancestral type were structurally fitted for the role of water-transport and made up the xylem of a Lygodium-\ike stele with little or no secondary xylem. As the cambial activity increased and centrifugal xylem became a prominent feature, usurping the function of the centripetal xylem, the latter became modified and fitted for a new service. 1 Vol. II. p. 326. 2 Scott (09) B. p. 476. XXXIl] RHETINANGIUM 181 RHETINANGIEAE. Rhetinangiiun. Gordon. Rhetinangium Arheri Gordon. The stem on which this genus is founded was discovered by Dr Gordon^ in the Calciferous Sandstone series of Pettycur : a specimen collected by Dr Kidston in Berwickshire may be specifically identical with the Pettycur plant. We know nothing of the leaves or reproductive organs of Rhetinangium. The stem, approximately 2 cm. in diameter, was probably cylindrical ; it possesses a single stele consisting mainly of a central primary region occupied by anastomosing groups of tracheids, 130 — 150/x in diameter, embedded in parenchyma containing numerous secretory sacs and ducts. In the peripheral region of the stele the groups of tracheids consist of narrower elements characterised by exarch protoxylem. Each peripheral group forms the base of a wedge of secondary xylem (fig. 450, ic^), the primary medullary rays being in direct connexion with some of the parenchyma of the primary xylem. The secondary tracheids, 45 — 85/>t in diameter, have multiseriate bordered pits on their radial walls and the rays are broad and deep as in Heterangium and Lyginofteris. With the exception of the external position of the protoxylem, the stele of Rhetinangium is practically identical with that of Heterangium, though in Rhetinangium the primary tracheids form larger and fewer groups. The inner cortex is composed of thin- walled cells with many secretory sacs: there are no stereome elements. In the outer cortex (fig. 449, cr) radially disposed bands of stereome form a reticulum with narrow and very long meshes like that of Medullosean petioles. The recently recorded occurrence of polydesmic petioles^ in Heterangium is of special interest from the point of view of the comparison of that genus with Rhetinangium and the Medulloseae. The very broad decurrent petiole-bases are a striking feature, the major diameter of the pulvinus-like base of the leaf -stalk exceeding that of the stem (fig. 449, f). Several xylem-strands 1 Gordon (12). The rich development of secretory tissue suggested the name Bhetinangium {prjTiprj, resinous gum): the same prefix had previously been adopted by Renault in his genus Befinodendron [Renault (96) A. p. 365]. 2 Scott (1.5). 182 RHETINANGIEAE [CH. from the peripheral region of the primary xylem go to form a single leaf-trace: these U-shaped strands of xylem destined for a leaf are connected laterally by parenchyma and form an irregu- larly corrugated band. Fig. 450 shows a petiole-trace still enclosed on each side by the secondary xylem cylinder ic^. Fig. 449. Rhetinangium Arberi Gord. Transverse section of stem with large leaf -base ; cr, outer cortex of stem ; p, petiole. (After Gordon ; x If.) There are several protoxylem groups ir^ a leaf-trace, one on the outer face of each xylem-strand. In the petiole the xylem groups are more intimately connected and the trace has the form of a flat band with abaxial protoxylem. There is no indication that a leaf -trace undergoes division into separate strands. The roots are described as tetrarch with well- developed secondary xylem. Fig. 450. Transverse section of leaf-trace of Rhetinangium Arberi showing the exarch structure; x^, secondary xylem. (After Gordon.) The primary xylem of Rhetinangium. agrees in its exarch structure with the Palaeozoic genera Sutcliffia, Megaloxylon and Stenomyelon, also with Lygodium and some other recent Ferns : the secondary wood is of the manoxylic type like that of Lygino- pteris, Heterangium and other genera. In the general structure of the stele Rhetinangium agrees with Sutcliffia and, except in the exarch structure of the primary xylem, with the steles of Heterangium and Medullosa anglica^; but the structure and origin of the leaf-traces are characters which mark it off 1 Page 90. XXXII] STENOMYELOX 183 from Sutcliffia. The sclerenchymatous bands in the inner cortex of Heterangium are unrepresented in Rhetinangktm, and in the latter genus the abundance of secretory sacs and ducts is a characteristic feature, moreover in Rhetinangium, the leaf-trace consists of several groups of primary xylem-elements. Dr Gordon regards Megaloxylon as the type which comes nearest to Rhetin- angium] but the differences in the structure of the secondary wood and the marked contrast between the leaf-traces are too pronounced to justify a preference for Megaloxylon over Heter- angium in the order of affinity. Gordon considers that the undivided leaf-trace of Rhetinangium may represent a form transitional between the simple leaf-trace of Lyginofteris and the much divided type in Medullosa. The external position of the protoxylem is a character to which too much weight may easily be attached: the difference in position between the protoxylem of Rhetinangium and Heterangium is in some examples of the latter genus hardly perceptible. Kubart^ speaks of the stele of his species Heterangium, Sturi as being almost exarch. The incon- stancy in the position of the protoxylem in the xylem of Osmun- daceous stems and in the primary bundles of Eristophyton and other Palaeozoic genera is worthy of consideration in this connexion. STENOMYELEAE. Stenomyelon. Kidston. Stenomyelon tuedianum Kidston. The specimens on which this monotypic genus is founded^ were obtained from the Lower Fig. 451. Stenomyelon tuedianum Kidst. Transverse section of stem. The black patches represent leaf -traces. (After Kidston ; x H.) Carboniferous rocks (Calciferous Sandstone series) at Norham Bridge, Berwickshire, Scotland. They consist of petrified pieces of a flattened stem, a fragment of a rachis and portions of laminae : ^ Kubart (14). ^ Kidston and Gwynne-Vaughan (12). 184 STENOMYELEAE [CH. there is no evidence as to the nature of the reproductive organs. The original form of the stem is obscured by the destruction of a considerable part of the cortex and the consequent flattening of the whole with the production of wing-like extensions of the imperfectly preserved tissues enclosing the almost cylindrical stele (figs. 451, 452). The stele consists of a bluntly triangular core of primary xylem, 3 — 4 mm. in diameter, composed almost entirely of reticu- lately pitted tracheids reaching a diameter of 160/x : a few paren- chymatous cells occur in the peripheral region and a band of parenchyma extends from the middle of each of the three sides of the xylem to the centre of the stele, thus dividing the primary conducting tissue into three groups which are the expression of a phyllotaxis of J. The tracheids near the outer face of each xylem-group are narrower than the others and have scalariform pitting. The secondary xylem first appears along the slightly concave sides of the primary stele, eventually enclosing the whole : it consists of tracheids with multiseriate pits on the radial walls and numerous deep medullary rays 1 — 6 cells broad. No phloem is preserved though it is probable that a narrow band was originally present. A characteristic feature is afforded by a zone of thick- walled cells, regarded as periderm, encircling the stele and formed by a deep-seated phellogen. On the outer face of this band there are projecting bosses, and similar sclerous nests are scattered in the cortex. The outer cortex has a Sparganum'^ type of hypoderm, that is long vertical strands of fibres alternating with parenchyma. The leaf-traces are formed from the blunt angles of the primary xylem ; an angle becomes nipped off as a more or less cylindrical strand enclosed by a zone of secondary tracheids which is very narrow on the adaxial side (fig. 452). Protoxylem was recognised only in the leaf-traces and not in the rest of the stele. A pair of protoxylem strands occurs on the outer edge of a prominent angle of xylem before it becomes detached from the stele, and these form a single strand at a lower level. As a leaf-trace passes outwards, the exarch xylem strand becomes mesarch and there is a single protoxylem group except at a point near the bifurcation ^ Similar to the Dictyoxylon type except in the independent and not anasto* mosing course of the stereome strands. . XXXII] CYCADOXYLON 185 of a trace. In its passage through the cortex a leaf-trace divides repeatedly, the secondary xylem on the outer face of each strand being retained for a considerable time. Our meagre knowledge of the nature of the leaves is based on incomplete fragments found in association with the stem. The leaf is believed to have been simple and characterised by a thick lamina with a hypodermal zone of sclerous strands and several vascular bundles. Fig. 452. Stenomyelon tnedianum. Transverse section of stele. (After Kidston; x 7.) As Kidston and Gwynne-Vaughan^ remark, Stenomyelon is a very distinct type ; while resembling Sutcliffia in some respects it differs from that genus not only in the structure of the primary stele but in the absence of the system of meristeles which form so characteristic a feature of the latter genus. CYCADOXYLEAE. Cycadoxylon. Renault. This generic term^ is applied to a few types of Permian and Upper Carboniferous stems possessing a vascular cylinder, which ^ Kidston and Gwynne-Vaughan (12) p. 269. 2 Renault (96) A. p. 307. 186 CYCADOXYLEAE [CH. may reach a considerable breadth, of secondary centrifugally developed xylem and phloem enclosing a large pith containing either a narrow, peripherally placed, and more or less continuous cylinder of inversely orientated conducting tissue or scattered bands of centripetal xylem and phloem. The secondary xylem is manoxylic, while the internal vascular tissue recalls that of Ptychoxylon and to a less extent the inverted arcs that are rarely met with in Lyginofteris stems. A brief diagnosis of two species may serve to illustrate the genus : a third species is included in Cycadoxylon, but it is founded on material too incomplete to admit of satisfactory diagnosis. Cycadoxylon Fremyi Renault. This Permian species^is represented by a pieceof stem 2 — 2-5cm. in diameter (fig. 453, B) characterised by (i) a fairly broad parenchymatous cortex with secretory canals and several hypo- dermal nests of sclerous tissue, (ii) a cylinder of secondary xylem and phloem nearly the whole of which is centrifugal, (iii) a large pith containing several scattered narrower bands or arcs of centripetally developed xylem and phloem. The tracheids, with 4 — 6 series of hexagonal pits, form radially disposed rows, 1 — 4 elements broad, separated by broad and deep medullary rays, Renault does not mention the occurrence of any primary xylem as distinct from the secondary centrifugal xylem, but in a section which I examined some years ago in his laboratory there appeared to be a group of primary tracheids. There are no anastomoses between the main cylinder and the internal bands of inversely orientated tissue. Cycadoxylon robustum (Seward). This species^ is based on a piece of stem from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire first described by Williamson and identi- fied as an unusually large example of Lyginofteris. Williamson and Scott, while recognising certain features in addition to the large size of the stem, which must have reached 14 cm. in diameter, expressed the view that 'there is a presumption that it really belonged to a Lyginodendron, or to some plant of the same type of structure.' The examination of additional material led me to 1 Renault (96) A. p. 308, figs. 55, 56. 2 geward (972). XXXII] PTYCHOXYLON 187 adopt the name Lyginodendron robustum, though I suggested that possibly Cycadoxylon might be the more appropriate genus. Subsequently Scott^ proposed the substitution of Cycadoxylon for Lyginodendron. The type-specimen consists of secondary xylem agreeing closely in structure with Lyginopteris and recent Cycads: the pith, 2-9 cm. in breadth, is incompletely preserved ; there is a narrow band of centripetal xylem ^ at the periphery of the peri- medullary region and close to the inner face of the main mass of wood (fig. 453, C ; the black line marks the position of the centri- petal xylem). Nests of sclerous tissue and secretory canals are scattered in the medullary parenchyma and deeper in this region are arcs of secondary parenchyma, possibly periderm. In places the centripetal and centrifugal xylem are in contact and occasion- ally the tapered ends of the rows of centrifugal tracheids merge into groups of primary xylem elements. The preservation in the central region is far from complete, and although the occurrence of primary xylem groups is probable it cannot be said to be positively established. At the inner edge of the centrifugal xylem and in tangential longitudinal sections a few leaf-traces are seen, but nothing is known as to the nature of the leaf-traces in their course beyond the stele nor have we any data with regard to the leaves or reproductive organs. This older species differs from Cycadoxylon Fremyi in the limitation of the centripetal xylem to the outer portion of the pith and in the presence of sclerous nests in the medullary region, though the latter character is probably of no great taxonomic value. Cycadoxylon robustum approaches more closely to Lygino- fteris, and although the differences are sufficient to justify a distinctive generic name, there can be little doubt as to a fairly intimate relationship between this type of Cycadoxylon and Lyginofteris. Ptychoxylon. Renault. Ptychoxylon^ Levyi Renault. Like many Palaeozoic genera founded on anatomical features, Ptychoxylon^ is represented only 1 Scott (00) B. p. 364. ^ A second band is sometimes present. Scott (00) B. p. 484. 3 ttH^, a fold. 4 Renault (89); (96) A; (93) A. PI. lxix. 188 CYCADOXYLEAE [CH. by stems, our knowledge of the leaves being confined to the leaf- traces in the stem which appears to have a phyllotaxis of | . The stem of this Permian species has a diameter of 5 — 6 cm. : the comparatively broad cortex contains numerous secretory canals, but in place of hypodermal strands of stereome there is a super- ficial periderm. The vascular tissue, consisting of secondary Fig. 453. A. Ptychoxylon Levyi ; transverse section of stem ; a, stele of branch. (After Renault.) B. Cycadoxylon Fremyi; transverse section of stem. (After Renault. ) C. Cycadoxylon robustum; centre of stem. 1 — 4, diagrams of sections of the stem of Ptychoxylon at different levels. (Simplified from Renault ) xylem and phloem, assumes different patterns at different levels. There is an outer vascular cylinder of centrifugally developed xylem and phloem; the xylem is manoxylic and the tracheids XXXIl] PTYCHOXYLON 189 have 3 — 5 rows of bordered pits on the radial walls. At intervals the continuity of the main stele is broken by the formation of leaf-gaps and before one gap is repaired a second may be produced, thus converting the cylinder into two crescentic and infolded bands (fig. 453, A). A striking character is the occurrence in the large parenchymatous central region of internal vascular bands or arcs varying in size and number at different levels and com- posed of centripetally developed secondary xylem and phloem. These internal bands differ from the outer and broader cylinder both in their inverse orientation and their limited vertical range. The connexion between the inner and outer vascular tissue and the alteration in plan of the conducting tissue at different levels are illustrated by fig. 453, 1 — 4, simphfied from some of Renault's figures of successive sections through a vertical distance of 4 — 5 cm. In section 1 the main cylinder is continuous except for a small gap where a leaf -trace is about to be given off: there are three internal vascular bands similar in structure to the outer stele but inversely orientated. At a higher level (section 2) the leaf-gap is larger and in it is a double leaf-trace of two collateral strands consisting of primary centripetal xylem and a fan-like group of secondary xylem and phloem. The free edges of the outer stele of section 1 have curved inwards and united with the two lateral medullary bands, while the lower internal band of section 1 has increased in extent and forms a discontinuous arc with the upper portions enclosed by the loops formed by the infolded ends of the outer vascular tissue. In section 3 a second leaf-gap has been formed in the outer stele and its invaginated ends have fused with the internal bands. In section 4 the first leaf -gap is closed and the invaginated bands of section 3 have broken up into an irregular circle of shorter bands. The section reproduced in fig. 453, A, shows the main cylinder in the form of two curved and flattened loops, each composed partly of the centrifugally developed xylem and phloem of the main stele and in part of the inversely orientated tissue of the inner bands. At a lower level the two bands b, 6, will become detached as the upper leaf-gap is closed and form part of an inner cyhnder like the discontinuous elhpse formed by the two bands c. The section of a branch-stele is seen at a. 190 CALAMOPITYEAE [CH. Ptychoxylon differs considerably from Medullosa, which Renault included in the Cycadoxyleae, in the plan of the vascular system: there is nothing corresponding to the 'partial pith' or primary region which forms the central portion of the plate- and snake-rings in Medullosa. The double leaf-trace and the absence of the Medullosa type of hypoderm are other dis- tinguishing features. The paired leaf -bundles suggest comparison with Lyginofteris among other genera and, as Scott^ points out, the internal arcs of inversely orientated tissue which sometimes occur in the peripheral region of the pith of Lyginopteris (fig. 405, C, c) behave like the internal bands of Ptychoxylon in occasionally joining the main cylinder at a leaf -gap; but the differences outweigh the resemblances. As regards the general arrangement of the vascular tissue in two irregular concentric circles and their connexions with one another, but not in the structure of the xylem and phloem, there is a similarity between this genus and such a Fern as Matonia. In the varying patterns formed by the vascular system at different levels in the stem Ptychoxylon resembles the Ferns Polyf odium quercifolium and P. heracleum^. CALAMOPITYEAE. Calamopitys. linger. In 1856 Unger^ described several fragmentary petrifactions from Thuringian strata of Upper Devonian age, the majority of which he referred to the Calamarieae and the Rhachiopterideae. In an earlier publication* he gave a list of species including two families,' the Haplocalameae and the Calamoxyleae, assigned by him to the group Calamarieae: in the Haplocalameae he placed the new genera Kalymma, Calamosyrix, Calamopteris, and Haplo- calamus. These were subsequently examined by Graf Solms- Laubach and identified as portions of petioles, for the most part belonging to unknown stems. In his second family, the Calamo- xyleae, Unger included the single genus Calamopitys represented by the type-species C. Saturni. The type-specimens have been thoroughly investigated by Solms-Laubach^ who instituted the 1 Scott (09) B. p. 492. 2 Klein (81). 3 Richter and Unger (56) B. * Unger (54) p. 599. 5 Solms-Laubach (96) B. XXXIl] CALAMOPITYS mi iamily-name Calamopityeae and recognised a close anatomical affinity between Calamofitys and Lyginofteris, a conclusion which led to the incorporation of Unger's genus in the Pteridosperms. Further data have been supphed by Zalessky^ and, more recently, by Scott and Jeffrey^ who have recognised Calamofitys in Lower Carboniferous beds in Kentucky. € alamo fitys Batumi Unger. Our knowledge of this and other species is confined to stems and petioles. One of the largest examples of the species is a piece of stem with a diameter of 1-5 cm. : the single stele consists of a parenchymatous pith enclosed by secondary xylem made up of tracheids with 4 — 8 rows of bordered pits and medullary Tig. 454. Cakimopifys Saturni. B, stem with leaf -base; x, primary xylem and pith; black patches represent leaf -traces; C, stem with two leaf -bases; D, section of petiole. (After Solms-Laubach.) Tays more than one cell broad and of considerable depth. Between the inner edge of the wood and the pith are groups of primary xylem (fig. 454, B, x) which, like those in Lyginopteris, constitute the leaf-traces : each has a single internal protoxylem strand (fig. 455, B). The comparatively wide cortex consists of paren- chyma with a hypoderm of the Sparganum type. Each primary xylem-strand passes out as a single leaf -trace through the secondary xylem and on emerging divides into two as in Lyginofteris : these branch in the cortex and the two are replaced by six in the leaf-base (fig. 454, B — D). As seen in figs. 454, C, 455, A, the boundary between the stem proper and the decurrent leaf-base is marked by a line of stereome strands. The petioles of Calamo- 1 Zalessky (11). 2 gcQ^t and Jeffrey (14). 192 CALAMOPITYEAE [CH. pitys Batumi agree generally in structure with the imperfect specimens on which Unger founded his genus Kalymma^, so named in reference to the structure of the hypodermal zone. A specimen described by Solms-Laubach as a Kalymma petiole occurs in organic connexion with a stem of Calanwpitys (fig. 454, C: a detached petiole is shown in fig. 454, D). The identification by White^ of this attached petiole with Unger's K. grandis has been confirmed by Scott and Jeffrey. A fuller account of Kalymma (fig. 456) is given on a later page, as the petioles so named belong to more than one species of stem. wm Fig. 455. Calamopitys Saturni. A, stem with leaf-bases; x 5. B, stele showing leaf-trace after emerging from the secondary xylem; x 16. (After Zalessky. ) In Calamofitys Saturni we have a plant agreeing with Lygino- pteris in the possession of secondary xylem of the manoxylic type and in the structure of the common primary bundles, while it is distinguished from Lyginofteris by the greater number and by the structure of the bundles in the axis of the leaf. ^ KoKv^lxa, a veil or covering. 2 White (052) B, p 384, XXXIl] CALAMOPITYS 193 Calamofitys annularis (linger)^. This species, originally assigned to the genus Stigmaria, has a more strongly developed primary vascular system and there is a more decided tendency towards the formation of a continuous zone of primary xylem on the inner edge of the secondary wood; but where the protoxylem tracheids occur the metaxylem elements form definite strands, like those of C. Saturni. It has been pointed out by Scott and Jeffrey that there is some evidence of the occurrence of tracheids in the parenchymatous pith of this species, an important feature distinguishing it from C. Saturni and con- necting it with C. americana. Information with regard to the behaviour of the leaf -traces is far from complete, but there are indications that each trace divides into two before emerging from the secondary xylem^. The leaf-traces in the cortex are concen- tric as in C. Saturni. Calamofitys americana Scott and Jeffrey. This Lower Carboniferous species^ from the Waverley shales of Kentucky is represented by portions of stems and leaf-bases and detached petioles. The secondary wood consists of tracheids, 30 — GO/x in diameter, with deep and broad rays ; the small pits on the tracheids form 5 — 6 alternating series. Phloem and cambium are very imperfectly preserved. The outer cortex is of the same type as in other species. At the inner edge of the secondary xylem there is a ring of primary xylem strands of mesarch structure composed of rather larger tracheids, 80 — 120/x in diameter, separated from one another by narrow strips of parenchyma. So far the vascular tissue agrees with that of C. annularis. In the American species the axial region is not a parenchymatous pith but a protostele, consisting of parenchyma and a larger or smaller number of tracheal groups, the number being less in stems with a larger central region. The peripheral strands alone are concerned with the emission of leaf-traces, as in Heterangium. Each primary xylem strand divides into two as it leaves the peri- medullary zone and passes through the secondary xylem as two 1 Richter and Unger (56) B. p. 174, PI. x. figs. 1—3; Solms-Laubach (96) B. p. 73; Scott (12) p. 1027. 2 Scott and Jeffrey (14) p. 326. 3 Ibid. p. 317, Pis. 27, 28, 30, 31. s. m 13 194 CAIiAMOPITYEAE [CH. bundles, each being accompanied by an arc of secondary tracbeids which, in the cortical region, completely surrounds the primary elements. At a later stage the single protoxylem of each trace divides into two and before entering the leaf -base there is a further division. In some specimens leaf-bases of the Kalymma type were found attached to the stem. The occurrence of tracheids in the axial region is a distinguishing feature and suggests a comparison with Heterangium, while C. Saturni agrees more closely with Lyginopteris ; the species C. annularis would appear, from the recent observations of Scott and Jeffrey, to occupy an inter- mediate position. Calamopitys, as the generic designation is here employed, is confined to central Germany and Kentucky and occurs in Upper Devonian and Lower Carboniferous strata. There is, however, some doubt as to the exact geological horizon of the rocks in both countries though in neither case is there any question of an horizon higher than Lower Carboniferous. Certain specimens from the Lower Carboniferous of Scotland described by Scott^ as species of Calamopitys have been made by Zalessky the type of a new genus, Eristofhyton, and are dealt with under that name. Kalymma. Unger. Kalymma grandis (petiole of Calamopitys). Under the generic name Kalymma Unger described specimens from Thuringia of Upper Devonian age which he assigned to two species, K. grandis and K. striatum. Solms-Laubach has shown that Kalymma is not an independent stem as Unger believed but a petiole of Calamopitys, and this has been confirmed by Scott and Jeffrey who found a leaf-base with the Kalymma type of structure in connexion with a piece of Calamopitys stem, probably C. americana. An examination of a section (2-3 cm. broad) of Unger's K. grandis in the collection of the Geological Survey enables me to confirm the conclusions recently published by Scott and Jeffrey. The best specimens of Kalymma, which appear to be identical in essential features with Unger's type-species, are from Kentucky, some from the Genessee shales of Upper Devonian age and others from beds (Waverley shales) believed to be Lower Carboniferous. 1 Scott (02). XXXIl] KAJLYMMA 195 13—2 196 CALAMOPITYEAE [CH. Through the kindness of Prof. Bower I have had an opportunity of examining sections from the older horizon in his possession. The transverse section reproduced in fig. 456 has a diameter of 3-8 X 2-2 cm.^ : on one side the radially placed plates of stereome are clearly shown, and in the outer portion of the ground-tissue is a ring of vascular bundles varying in size and shape but with a general tendency to a radially elongated form. The ground- tissue consists of homogeneous parenchyma : in one place I noticed what appeared to be a large secretory canal, but secretory tissue, generally at least, is unrepresented. The xylem is com- posed of imperfectly preserved elements, which appear to have scalariform pits; spiral protoxylem strands, embedded in the metaxylem as two or four groups, occur near the ends of the long axis of the bundle and in some cases also near the centre. The phloem probably surrounded the xylem, though it is not certain whether the arrangement was collateral or concentric : there are no secondary-xylem tracheids, though in some places I noticed a tendency to a radial disposition of cells at the periphery of the vascular tissue simulating an early stage of secondary growth. Unger's second species Kalymma striata is characterised by an arrangement of the bundles similar to that in a petiole described by Scott and Jeffrey as Calamopteris Hiffocrefis which differs from Kalymma in the partial substitution of bands of vascular tissue for separate bundles and to some extent in the disposition of the bundles. The two types of petiole Kalymma and Cala- mopteris, as Scott and Jeffrey state, are very closely allied. Dawson and Penhallow^ have also described Kalymma grandis from Kentucky but they, like Unger, mistook the hypodermal stereome for an outer zone of vascular bundles. The petioles from Germany and North America included under the name Kalymma grandis, though too similar to be referred to different species, no doubt represent petioles of stems which are unquestionably distinct types: as in the case of Myeloxylon in its relation to the genus Medullosa, Kalymma stands for several closely allied forms of petioles belonging to several species of Calamofitys. 1 Scott and Jeffrey (14) p. 328, refer to a specimen over 6 cm. in diameter: these authors give several excellent figures of Kalymma. 2 Dawson and Penhallow (91). XXXIl] ERISTOPHYTON 197 Eristophyton. Zalessky. Eristophyton fasciculare (Scott). The generic name Eristo- phyton^ was proposed by Zalessky^ for two incomplete stems of Lower Carboniferous age provisionally^ referred by Scott to Araucarioxylon and subsequently to Calaynopitys^. The species E. fasciculare was founded on material obtained by Dr Kidston from the Lower Carboniferous of Dumbarton, Scotland, and on a specimen in the Williamson collection from Northumberland. There is a small pith of parenchyma, 2—3 mm. in diameter, with eight strands of primary xylem of varying diameter (fig. 457) Fig. 457. Eristophyton fasciculare. Transverse section showing the relation of primary (black) to secondary xylem. (After Scott.) and in each a single protoxylem-group. The primary xylem elements are considerably larger than the secondary tracheids. These xylem-bundles are leaf-traces and their disposition points to a phyllotaxis of f . The traces attain their maximum size when about to pass out through the secondary xylem. The tracheids are reticulate and scalariform while some have an intermediate type of pitting. A leaf-trace on reaching the pith gradually moves further from the xylem-cylinder and may be separated from it by 2 — 6 layers of parenchyma: as it passes down the pith the protoxylem strand assumes an almost endarch position consequent on the reduction of the centripetal xylem. In Scott's words, 'each circummedullary strand branches at regular ^ ipLaros, to be disputed. 3 Scott (992). 2 Zalessky (11). * Scott (02). 198 CAIiAMOPITYEAE [CH. intervals ; the one branch, that on the anodic side [turned towards the course of the genetic spiral], becomes the leaf-trace and passes out, while the other continues its course up the stem as a reparatory strand, until the next leaf of the orthostichy has to be supplied^.' The secondary xylem consists almost entirely of tracheids with 3 — 4 rows of pits on the radial walls and medullary rays usually one cell broad varying in depth from 1 or 2 to 16 or more cells. A characteristic feature of the secondary xylem is the occurrence on its inner face of numerous short and broad tracheae similar to the still larger tracheae in the primary stele of Megaloxylon^. Nothing is known as to the behaviour of the leaf-trace in the extrastelar region, but the fact that an outgoing trace was found to have two protoxylems points to a subdivision similar to that of the fohar bundles of Calamopitys Saturni. A well-marked difference between Eristofhyton fasciculare and Calamopitys and Lyginofteris is the more compact structure of the secondary wood ; it is pycnoxylic and not manoxyHc. Prof. Zalessky in criticising the use of the generic title Calamopitys puts forward several arguments in support of his institution of a new designation: (i) the primary xylem strands of Eristofhyton are not confined to the periphery of the pith as is the case in Calamopitys Saturni, though he speaks of one leaf-trace in the latter species separated by several layers of cells from the xylem-cylinder ; (ii) some of the pith-cells have thick walls and dark contents in distinction to the homogeneous parenchyma of Calamopitys, a feature of little importance; (iii) the difference in the structure of the secondary wood already alluded to, though this loses some of its significance by the occurrence of narrower rays, more like those of Eristophyton, in C. annularis; (iv) the more elliptical and broader pits in the secondary tracheids in place of the more regular hexagonal form in Calamopitys. While admitting a certain degree of relationship between the two types, Zalessky asserts that as yet we have insufficient evidence to justify their generic union. Scott^ maintains that Zalessky does not attach sufficient weight to the form and mesarch structure of the primary xylem bundles as a feature common to both genera. 1 Scott (02) p. 336. 2 Page 175. 3 Scott (12) p. 1027. XXXIl] ERISTOPHYTON 199 Eristophyton Beinertianum (Goeppert). 1850. Araucarites Beinertianus Goeppert, Mon. Foss. Conif. p. 233.. Pis. 42, 43. 1872. Araucarioxylon Beinertianum Kraus, in Schimper's Trait. Pal. Vol. ii. p. 381. 1888. Araucarites Beinertianus Goeppert and Stenzel, Abh. K. Preuss. Akad. Wiss. p. 30, PL iv. 1902. Calamopitys Beinertiana Scott, Trans. R. Soc. Edinb. Vol. 40, p. 341, Pis. I., IV., V. 1909^. Ullmannites Beinertianus Tuzson, Result. Wiss. Erforsch. Balatonsees, Bd I. Teil i. p. 24. 1911. Eristophyton Beinertianum Zalessky, Com. Geol. St Petersb. p. 24. The pith, 13 — 15 mm. in diameter, is rather larger than in E. fasciculare and is characterised by the occurrence of dark sclerotic nests surrounded by radially disposed rows of parenchyma. The primary xylem strands are more numerous and smaller than in E. fasciculare and these increase in diameter as they approach the secondary wood. In places the primary xylem elements form a more or less continuous band as in Calamofitys annularis. Fig. 458. Eristophyton Beinertianum. A strand of primary xylem, showing the protoxylem, px, abutting on the secondary xylem. (x 35. After Zalessky.) The largest leaf-trace bundles at the periphery of the pith are mesarch (fig. 458), but as each trace passes down the pith the reduction in the centripetal xylem is carried further than in E. fasciculare until the xylem-strand becomes endarch in the lower part of its course. The secondary tracheids have usually two contiguous rows of pits and the medullary rays are one cell broad. There can be no doubt as to the generic identity of the two 1 Tuzson (09). 200 CLADOXYLEAE [CH. species referred to Eristophyton, but the question as to the degree of affinity to C alamo fitys is more difficult to settle. There is force in Zalessky's contention that these two stems should not be retained in Calamopitys: the recently described American species, C. americana Scott and Jeiirey, gives emphasis to the view that the restriction of C alamo fitys to the German (and American) types is the safer course. While Calamopitys as thus restricted is almost certainly a Pteridosperm, the inclusion of the types referred to Eristofhyton in the same category rests on a more slender basis. CLADOXYLEAE. This order was founded by Unger^ for some imperfectly preserved stems from Palaeozoic strata in Thuringia and in it he included the two genera Cladoxylon and Schizoxylon. There is some doubt as to the precise age of the Thuringian beds ; they were assigned by Kichter to the Devonian system and subse- quently placed in the Culm : Solms-Laubach in his later reference to Unger's plants favours a Devonian horizon^. Unger included the Cladoxyleae in the Lycopodiales, and though this conclusion is not accepted the position of the order is still uncertain. His genus Schizoxylon has no claim to generic separation from Clado- xylon. An inspection of the illustrations in the memoir by Kichter and Unger reveals a striking resemblance in the main anatomical features between several types assigned to different genera and distributed among the Cladoxyleae and Rhachiopterideae (a term first used by Corda for petrified rachises or petioles of ferns) and other orders. Solms-Laubach^, to whom our more accurate information as to Unger's plants is chiefly due, is incUned to regard the specimens referred by Unger to the genus Arctopodium as young stems of Cladoxylon, and he draws attention to a close similarity between Hierogramma, another of Unger's genera, and Cladoxylon. Paul Bertrand* goes further in considering that the following genera represent one generic type, namely Syncardia (fig. 459, F), Hierogramma, Arctopodium, Cladoxylon, and Schizo- xylon. The same author interprets the fossils so named by 1 Unger and Richter (56) B. p. 178. ^ gcott and Jeffrey (14) p. 364. 3 Solms-Laubach (96) B. * P. Bertrand (08). XXXIl] CLADOXYLON 201 Unger as stems and does not agree with the inclusion of any of them in the Rhachiopterideae. Without losing sight of the fact that Bertrand's conclusion is not based on proof but is the expression of a view suggested by a close agreement in general anatomical plan, I venture to adopt the designation Cladoxylon in a wide sense primarily on the ground that Bertrand's view is probably correct and in part for the sake of convenience of description. As Unger's species of Cladoxylon differ from one another in features which may fairly be regarded as of minor importance, they are included under one specific name. Cladoxylon. Unger. Cladoxylon mirabile Unger^. The following are regarded as specifically identical with or closely allied to Cladoxylon mirabile : C. dubium, Schizoxylon taeniatum, Hierogramma mysticum, Syn- cardia fusilla, Arctofodium insigne and A. radiatum^. i. Stems. The stems assigned to Cladoxylon are characterised by a complex system of steles, either simple or branched and occasionally anastomosing, presenting in transverse section the form of oval or cylindrical strands or narrow, straight or curved bands arranged on a more or less clearly marked radial plan (fig. 459, A, B, D). In some stems the primary vascular tissue is enclosed by secondary xylem and phloem (fig. 460, B), while in others (Unger's Arctof odium, Hierogramma^, Syncardia) there is no evidence of secondary thickening. The diagrammatic drawing represented in fig. 459, F, shows a section of a small axis, regarded by Unger and Solms as a petiole (3 mm. in diameter), containing four vascular strands composed exclusively of primary xylem, each with one or, in the case of a double strand, two protoxylem groups. This type may be a slender stem or branch or possibly a petiole. The other extreme, as regards complexity of vascular structure, is represented by such stems as those shown in fig. 459, A, B, D. In Unger's Cladoxylon mirabile (fig. 459, A; fig. 460, B) the stem reaches a diameter of 3 cm. and consists of several radially disposed plates of vascular tissue with an 1 Unger and Richter (56) B. p. 179, PI. xn. figs. 6, 7; Solms -Laubach (96) B. p. 52, PI. n. figs. 11, 13(?). 2 Unger and Richter, PI. xn. figs. 3, 4; Solms-Laubach (96) B. PI. xi. fig. 10. 3 See footnote 3, p. 205. 202 CLADOXYLEAE [CH. occasional smaller oval or cylindrical stele embedded in a ground- tissue composed of thick- walled cells. The plates are curved like a U or sinuous and not infrequently anastomosing. In a section of this type figured by Unger the vascular plates appear to form a complex anastomosing system, but Solms^ states that the drawing exaggerates the amount of fusion between the strands, Fig. 459. A, Cladoxylon mirabile, section of stem; B, Cladoxylon taeniatum, section of stem ; C, Cladoxylon dubium, section of stele ; D, C. dubium, section of stem; E, Cladoxylon (?) mirabile, section of petiole; F, Syncardia pusilla; G, development of leaf -trace in Cladoxylon taeniatum. (A — E, after Solms- Laubach; F, after Unger; G, after P. Bertrand.) and an examination of a section in the collection of the EngHsh Geological Survey cut from Unger's specimen enables me to confirm this statement. Each vascular plate consists of a narrow median region composed of primary tracheids with a scalariform type of pitting surrounded by secondary tracheids with inter- spersed medullary rays one cell broad. The thickness of the 1 Solms (96) B. p. 53. XXXIl] CLADOXYLON 203 secondary xylem varies considerably in the same specimen and in places this tissue is hardly represented, a fact of importance in view of the very striking resemblance between Arctopodium and Cladoxylon, the sections referred by Unger to the former genus having steles without any secondary xylem. The occur- rence of one or two elongated spaces (shown in black in fig. 459, A) near the distal end of each plate mark the position of the proto- xylem tracheids. Fig. 459, C, represents a stele of a stem referred by Unger and by Solms to Cladoxylon dubium which shows the typical Cladoxylon structure, namely the central primary xylem with distally placed protoxylem and the enclosing sheath of secondary xylem. In the stem shown in fig. 459, D (C. dubium) there are 12 steles, each constructed on the plan already described, differing in their relatively broader and shorter form and in the greater breadth of the secondary xylem from those seen in fig. 459, A (C. mirahile). The black areas in fig. 459, A, show the primary xylem, and the protoxylem is seen in fig. 459, C. A stem described by Dawson^ as Asteropteris novehoracensis from Devonian beds is compared by him with Unger's Cladoxylon mirahile and regarded as possibly allied to it. The radial plates of xylem in Dawson's plant meet in the centre like those of Asterochlaena and the leaf- traces are of the Clepsydropsoid type. The type of stem for which Unger founded his genus Schizoxylon is represented in fig. 459, B ; there are five small steles in the centre and external to these eleven radially arranged plates, with oval steles between them, in the peripheral region of the stem. Each stele consists of primary (black in the figure) and secondary xylem and agrees with the steles in the other stems. From the type of stem illustrated by Cladoxylon mirahile to that on which the genera Arctopodium^ and Hierogra7n?na^ were founded is a very small step: the vascular tissue has the same characters both as regards gross and minute anatomy, but there is no evidence of cambial activity in the stems referred to the two latter genera, a difference in itself hardly worthy of generic recognition. 1 Dawson (81) A. p. 299, PI. xii. figs. 1—9; Solms -Laubach (91) A. pp. 173, 188 2 This type is represented in the Geological Survey Collection (No. 15871). ^ For figures, see Solms-Laubach (96) B. PI. n. 204 CLADOXYLEAE [CH. ii. Leaves. Before describing a second type of stem referred to Cladoxylon it is important to consider briefly such, evidence as we have as to the vascular supply of the leaves. Nothing is known of the reproductive organs and there is no satisfactory information with regard to the form of the fronds. Solms-Laubach has described the only known example of a lateral branch of a Cladoxylon stem (fig. 459, E) : this has a single concentric vascular strand of plate-like form with two blunt projections and there are four protoxylem-groups, two in the angle of the plate and two at the base of the projections. The structure is essentially fern-like; the xylem is wholly primary. This type of vascular strand agrees fairly closely with that of a petiole described by Unger as Megalorhachis elliptica, a section of which is in the Museum of the Geological Survey^. The petiole is oval in section and laterally winged, and the meristele is tangentially elongated and has two blunt projections almost identical with those in fig. 459, F. There is no evidence as to the nature of the supporting stem, but there can be little doubt as to the close connexion with Megalorhachis and the section shown in fig. 459, F. In a note pubHshed in 1908 P. Bertrand stated that he had identified several of Unger's genera as stems which bore leaf-traces having the form and structure of Clepsydropsis, one of the types referred by Unger to the Rhachiopterideae and described in the second volume of this work^ as a Coenopteridean petiole. Bertrand points out that in the oval or plate-like steles of Cladoxylon, Arctopodium, Hierogramma, etc., there is a single protoxylem group near the distal end of the primary xylem, and he adds that the leaf-traces were formed of strands cut off from the distal portions of the vascular plates. Similarly the hour-glass-like leaf-trace in the primary rachis of Clepsydropsis gives off from each, end a ring of xylem to supply a secondary rachis. These laterally detached annular strands are, he believes, similar to the leaf -trace cut off from the steles in a Cladoxylon stem. The conclusion is that Cladoxylon is a fern stem and its leaf-trace represents the simplest form of the Clepsydropsis type, namely an oval bundle of xylem with a central protoxylem, which is 1 No. 15870. Unger and Richter (56) B. PI. vn. figs. 19—21. 2 Page 472, fig. 324. XXXIlJ CLADOXYLON 205 also the form of the trace given off from the stem of Aster ochlaena. Solms^, while admitting that Bertrand may be correct in uniting under one genus Cladoxylon and such types as Syncardia, Hiero- gramma, and Arctofodium, disagrees with the view that they are Clefsydropsis stems. A Clepsydropsoid leaf -trace has never been found in direct association with any of the stems of the Cladoxylon type and such evidence as there is indicates a leaf- trace of an entirely different form (fig. 459, E). In his more recent memoir on Asterochlaena Bertrand^ draws attention to Solms' figures of a stele of Cladoxylon (fig. 459, C) in which the distal portion is on the point of being separated as a small annular strand. This, Bertrand considers, would gradually become con- verted into a Clepsydropsis form of stele as it passed to the petiole. Bertrand's drawings made from a section of Cladoxylon taeniatum (Ung.) (fig. 459, G) illustrate successive stages in the departure of a leaf-trace from one of the plate-like steles of the stem (fig. 459, B). In fig. 459, G, 1, a piece of the stele is detached and near its extremity is a group of thin-walled cells with proto- xylem : a later stage is seen in fig. 2, and in fig. 3 a small ring of xylem is being detached which, Bertrand assumes, would later in its course be converted into the Clepsydropsoid strand (fig. 4), which consists of primary tissue. The weak point in Bertrand's contention^ is the absence of any proof of a true Clepsydropsoid trace in con- nexion with a Cladoxylon stem, and there is a strong probability that the leaf -trace of Cladoxylon has the form shown in fig. 459, E. Cladoxylon Kidstoni Solms-Laubach*. This species, founded on imperfectly preserved material in Dr Kidston's collection from Lower Carboniferous rocks in Berwick- shire, is referred to Cladoxylon on evidence that cannot be regarded 1 Solms-Laubach (10) p. 540. 2 Bertrand, P. (11) p. 47. ^ Since this account was printed my attention has been drawn by Dr Scott to a note by Bertrand in which he considerably modifies his views. He finds that Hierogramma and Syncardia are probably diiBferent states of the petiole of Cladoxylon and while agreeing with Solms-Laubach's conclusions he has been able to add important new facts. Bertrand has now given up the opinion that Clep- sydropsis is the petiole of Cladoxylon. For further details students should consult the preliminary note which it is hoped will be followed by a fully illustrated memoir [Bertrand, P. (14)]. * Sohns-Laubach (10) p. 537, PI. m. figs. 7, 11, 13. 206 CLADOXYLEAE [CH. as convincing. The type-specimen consists of a small piece of stem about 3 cm. in breadth showing three complete oval steles and portions of two others which seem to be in their original position and probably formed part of a series of peripheral steles Fig. 460. A, C. A single stele and tracheids of Cladoxylon Kidstoni. (Kidston CoU. 630 B, 630 C.) B. Cladoxylon mirabile, part of a stele. (Museum of Practical Geology, 15872.) such as those shown in fig. 459, D. Each stele consists mainly of secondary xylem (fig. 460, A) with some crushed tissue, pre- sumably phloem, on its outer face. The secondary xylem is XXXIl] CLADOXYLON 207 narrower on the inner side of each stele where a wedge-shaped piece is partially detached. In the centre there is a narrow area parallel to the long axis of the stele containing crushed tissue which probably consists of parenchyma and primary xylem, but the preservation is very imperfect. The secondary xylem has a fairly compact structure and the rays are narrow, 1 — 10 cells in depth. The pits of the tracheids are described by Solms as scalariform with occasionally two rows of elliptical pits on the radial walls. A careful examination of the type-specimen leads me to describe the pits as uniseriate and transversely elongated, very like those of Proto'pitys, or biseriate and almost circular like those of Conifers, the pits of the two rows being alternate or sometimes opposite (fig. 460, C) : in places three rows of bordered pits are present. There is a certain degree of resemblance between the steles of this species and those of the South African stem Rhexoxylon^, but the data are inadequate for a satisfactory comparison. There is a close similarity between the vascular systems of Cladoxylon and Medullosa, but an obvious difference is the sub- stitution of the oval, transversely elongated, pits on the xylem elements for the multiseriate pitting of Medullosa. In Cladoxylon Kidstoni the pitting shows transitional forms between a narrow scalariform uniseriate type and a biseriate or triseriate arrange- ment similar to that in the Araucarineae and Cordaitales. In Cladoxylon, as limited by Unger, the presence of secondary wood is a generic feature, but by the inclusion of Arctopodium and other forms this character no longer holds good. The inclusion of these more fern-Hke stems without secondary xylem brings Clado- xylon (in the wider sense) into closer contact with Aster ochlaena, a comparison previously suggested by more than one author. In Medullosa the development of secondary xylem is on a larger scale than in Cladoxylon, and the vascular system of the former genus assumes a more complex form. Moreover the Myeloxylon type of petiole, which is a distinctive feature of Medullosa, differs widely from any form of leaf-trace associated with Cladoxylon. I 1 Bancroft (13). 208 CLADOXYLEAE [CH. Volkelia. Solms-Laubach. Volkelia refracta (Goeppert). The generic name Volkelia^ was proposed by Solms-Laubach^ as a substitute for Spheno'pteris^ in the case of some petrified stems or petioles associated with frag- mentary impressions of fronds from Lower Carboniferous rocks in Silesia. Both leaf -impressions and petrifactions were included in the genus Sphenopteris : Solms, while retaining Goeppert's designation for the leaf fragments, proposed a new generic name for the petrifactions on the ground that there is insufiicient evidence of their connexion with the leaves. The short account of Goeppert's petrified specimen given by Graf Solms-Laubach in his 'Fossil Botany*' is supplemented by a fuller description in a later paper. The fragments of highly compound fronds are characterised by very small filiform ultimate segments, but the specimens are too imperfect to afford a clear idea of the habit of the leaf. The 'stem' bears a close superficial resemblance to that described by Unger as Cladoxylon duhium (fig. 459, C, D) and was regarded by him as an example of that species : it contains several radially placed steles represented by fairly well-preserved xylem, but no phloem has been recognised. The steles vary in size and shape: five reach almost to the centre (fig. 461, A) and smaller xylem groups occupy a peripheral position. Each stele is excentric in structure and consists of (i) an outer zone of secondary tracheids of horse-shoe form in transverse section, but the apparent gap in the secondary xylem on the outer edge of each stele is due to the crushing of the tracheal tissue and to its smaller breadth in the distal part of each group; this is shown in fig. 461, B, where the apparent gap is seen to be occupied by distorted and crushed tracheids, a, identical with those which form the rest of the outer zone (fig. 461, B, 6); (ii) a zone of tracheal tissue continuous with and originally identical in appear- ance— except that the elements are rather narrower- — with the outer secondary xylem; (iii) an excentrically situated island composed of tracheids enclosing a small central area occupied by thin- walled parenchyma. This third region, represented by ^ After the late Herr Volkel of Neurode. 2 Solms-Laubach (10), PL m. figs. 1—4. 3 Goeppert (52) PL xii. * Solms-Laubach (91) A. p. 164. XXXIl] VOLKELIA 209 black patches in fig. 461, A, in all probability represents the primary part of each stele to which the rest of the tissue has been added by the cambium. A striking feature of the secondary xylem is the absence of medullary rays : the tracheids resemble those of Cladoxylon and Protofitys in the transverse elongation of the pits (fig. 461, D) which form either a single row or several irregularly distributed rows. The primary xylem consists in the peripheral region of tracheids with very narrow scalariform pitting which at first sight suggest close spiral bands (fig. 461, C), Fig. 461. Volkelia refracta. A. Transverse section of a specimen in the Breslau Museum. B. Portion of a stele; a, the crushed xylem on the outer side; b, the inner side. C. Longitudinal section showing the median protoxylem. D. Tracheid from the secondary xylem. (After Solms-Laubach.) while the inner tracheids are either annular or reticulate and associated with elongated parenchyma. The imperfectly preserved ground-tissue appears to consist of homogeneous parenchyma with radially disposed bands of stereome in the outer cortex. Our knowledge of Volkelia, though far from complete, justifies its generic separation from Cladoxylon from which it differs in the lack of medullary rays and in the structure of the primary portion of each stele. In the form and arrangement of the pits in the secondary tracheids Volkelia differs from Medullosa and S. Ill 14 210 PROTOPITYEAE [CH. resembles Cladoxylon. The opinion expressed by P. Bertrand^ that Volkelia is probably the stem of one of the Zygopterideae is based on the older accounts of the genus and not on the fuller description of 1910. PROTOPITYEAE. Protopitys. Goeppert. The only species so far described is that for which Goeppert founded the genus in 1850, substituting Protopitys^ for the name Araucarites, adopted in an earlier paper, on the ground that the structure of the xylem denoted a distinct generic type. The type- species is from the Upper Devonian rocks of Falkenberg in Silesia. Protopitys Buchiana Goeppert. 1845. Araucarites Buchianus Goeppert, in Wimmer's Flor. Schlesien (edit. II.) p. 218. 1847. Pinites Goepperti Unger, Chlor. Protog. p. 31. 1847. Dadoxylon Buchianum Endlicher, Syn. Conif. p. 300. 1850. Protopitys Buchiana Goeppert, Foss. Conif. p. 229, PL xxxvii. figs. 4 — 7; PI. XXXVIII. figs. 1, 2. In his Monograph of Fossil Conifers Goeppert figured a large piece of stem consisting mainly of secondary wood and described the more important anatomical features. He recognised the narrow, transversely elongated, pits on the radial walls of the tracheids as a feature of special interest indicating a type of pitting transitional between that of Ferns and Conifers. A further description was given by Kraus^ who included under Goeppert's name both the Falkenberg stem and a second specimen from Basel though the latter is Triassic in age and a distinct plant; he sug- gested a comparison of Protopitys with Sigillaria and Stigmaria rather than with Conifers. It is, however, to Graf Solms-Laubach* that we owe the most thorough account of this species. Nothing is known of the leaves or reproductive organs. The largest piece of stem is nearly 1 ft in diameter and consists mainly of secondary xylem resembling that of Conifers and Cordaites except in the 1 P. Bertrand (08). 2 The name Palaeopitys, with which Protopitys might be confused, was used by McNab for an imperfect specimen from the Old Red Sandstone of Scotland described as Palaeopitys Milleri; McNab (70). 3 Kraus (92). * Solms-Laubach (93). XXXIl] PROTOPITYS 211 form of the bordered pits on the radial walls of the tracheids (fig. 462, D). The centre of the stem is occupied by a parenchy- matous pith, elliptical in transverse section, enclosed by a band hX-^ ^-^^^ (ZD OC OOl I ^ ^ p8o DO Fig. 462. Protopitys BiLchiana. A, B. Central region of the stem showing the pith, the primary xylem (black in fig. A) and (A) the inner part of the secondary xylem ; a, shoulders of xylem at the leaf -gaps ; It leaf -trace ; pz protoxylem. C. Secondary, x^, and primary xylem, x^. D. Radial longitudinal section of the secondary xylem. E. Scalariform tracheid of the primary xylem. F. Pits on the meduUary-ray cells. (After Solms-Laubach.) of primary xylem composed of large polygonal tracheids (fig. 462, C, x^) characterised by a delicate scalariform pitting on all their walls (fig. 462, E). The primary xylem forms a narrow layer on the sides of the ellipse, 1 — 3 elements broad (fig. 462, A, B), but 14—2 212 PROTOPITYEAE [CH. it increases in breadth at the ends of the long axis where the tracheids are intermixed with parenchyma. The primary xylem and pith- tissue at the ends of the major axis of the central region assume different forms at different levels, owing to the detach- ment of leaf-traces and the consequent formation of foliar gaps as portions of the primary xylem pass obliquely outwards into the secondary xylem on the way to the distichously arranged alternate leaves. The diagram, fig. 462, A, shows the inner part of the secondary xylem (see also fig. 462, C, x^) which at one end. It, has formed an oval group about to pass out as a leaf- trace: at the opposite end the strand is detached and divided into two equal branches. The two swellings of the primary xylem ellipse shown at a in figs. 462, A and B, are a characteristic feature: these are clearly seen after the leaf- trace has become detached; at the inner edge of each of them there appears to be a protoxylem strand. After the formation of a foliar gap these swellings of the xylem gradually meet and so re-establish con- tinuity below the outgoing leaf-trace. No protoxylem has been detected in the actual trace, which is believed to be concentric. The formation of the leaf-gap and the shoulders bordering it constitute interesting filicinean features, recalling corresponding characters in solenostelic Ferns. At the upper end of the diagram, fig. 462, B, the outgoing leaf-trace is undergoing dichotomy while at the opposite end the trace has passed out of view. The secondary xylem shows incomplete rings or arcs of narrower elements, which at first sight give the impression of annual rings : the occurrence of similar incomplete or pseudo-rings is a common feature in Lepidodendron and other Palaeozoic stems. The secondary tracheids (54-4/x in tangential diameter, 68-5/x in radial diameter) have usually a single series of broadly oval bordered pits on the radial walls with here and there two rows (fig. 462, D)» In one case only were the pits of the medullary rays recognised (fig. 462, F). The rays are uniseriate, generally 1 — 2 cells deep, but occasionally 3 cells in depth and very rarely deeper. The cambium is of the normal type, and in some specimens secondary phloem was found consisting of bands, 4 — 5 layers broad, of stone-cells alternating with tubular thin-walled elements, pre- sumably sieve- tubes. XXXIl] PROTOPITYS 213 As Solms-Laubach says, it is highly probable that each leaf- trace, which forks close to its exit from the primary xylem, became further subdivided before reaching the leaf. Morphologically, Protofitys is of special importance as a type possessing characters that indicate a connexion with Conifers or Cordaitean genera, notably the structure of the secondary wood, while the presence of foliar gaps is a feature reminiscent of Ferns. The primary xylem resembles that of some of the Palaeozoic arborescent Lycopodiales, but in Protopitys the interruptions in this tissue are due to the emission of leaf-bundles, whereas in the discontinuous primary xylem of some Sigillarias^ the gaps have no connexion with leaf -traces. Moreover the distichous leaves of Protopitys and the larger, branched, leaf-traces are other distinguishing features. The pitting of the primary xylem is like that in the Lycopodiales and Filicales, while that of the secondary wood shows a closer approach to the coniferous type. A comparison may also be made with the transversely elongated pits of Cladoxylon Kidstoni^. A piece of wood agreeing anatomically with the Silesian species of Protopitys has been found in the Yoredale rocks of England^. The peculiarities of the genus have been emphasised by Solms- Laubach by the institution of a family-name Protopityeae : the genus is essentially a generalised type exhibiting in the structure of its stem both Filicean and Coniferous features. The bordered pits differ from those in recent Conifers in their flatter form, but in this respect they exhibit a closer agreement with the trans- versely stretched pits of Xenoxylon phyllocladoides Goth.*, a Mesozoic species. 1 Vol. n. p. 212, fig. 200, A, B. 2 See page 206. ^ In the form of the pits on the tracheids and in the structure of the medullary rays the EngHsh species (as represented in Dr Kidston's Collection) agrees very closely with Goeppert's type. * Gothan (O?^) p. 10. CHAPTER XXXIII. CORD AIT ALES. A. POROXYLEAE. Poroxylon. Renault. In 1879 Renault^ briefly summarised the anatomical features of some silicified vegetative shoots from the Permian of Autun for which he instituted a new family, the Poroxyleae. The more complete account contains a description of two species, Poroxylon Boysseti and P. Dvchartrei : the latter was afterwards recognised as a stem of Heterangium. Renault considered this new genus to be closely allied to Sigillaria and Sigillariopsis and pointed out its resemblance to Cordaites. Additional species have since been described but as yet the genus has not been found outside France in Permo-Carboniferous strata of Autun and the St Etienne district. The results of a more detailed investigation of the anatomy of the genus were published by Bertrand and Renault in 1882 and since then^ Bertrand, Renault, and Scott have added to our knowledge of this interesting type. In several respects Poroxylon stems present a striking resemblance to Lyginopteris, but the recent discovery of the genus Mesoxylon has given greater significance to the characters in which Poroxylon agrees with representatives of the Cordaitales. Our knowledge of the genus, though exceptionally fuU with regard to the anatomy of vegetative shoots, does not include any precise information as to the repro- ductive organs. 1 Renault (79) B. p. 272, Pis. xm. xiv. 2 Bertrand and Renault (82); Bertrand, C. E. (89); Renault (96) A. p. 279, (93) A. Pis. Lxxiv. Lxxv; Scott (09) B. p. 500. See also Scott and Maslen (10) Maslen (11) p. 409. CH. XXXIIl] ^ POROXYLON 215 The slender cylindrical stems, not exceeding 2 — 3 cm. in diameter in specimens so far recorded, bore large broadly linear leaves similar in form and venation to those of some species of Cordaites which were attached singly to slightly swollen nodes separated from one another by internodes several centimetres long. The base of the rather fleshy lamina passes imperceptibly from the narrow lower portion into a tangentially expanded petiole which forms a decurrent ridge on the stem. Axillary buds frequently occur. Little is known of the leaf-impressions, but if Grand'Euryi is correct in his identification of certain speci- mens from French Stephanian beds as the leaves of Poroxylon, the lamina reached a length of 1 met. and a breadth of 15 — 20 cm. In habit the stems probably resembled some of the larger-leaved Bamboos. The only evidence bearing on the nature of the re- productive organs is furnished by Grand' Eury who beheves that some Rhahdocarfus seeds and bractless inflorescences associated with the leaves assigned to Poroxylon belong to that genus. The single cyhndrical stele has a relatively large soUd pith, the perimedullary region being characterised by the occurrence of a row of primary crescentic strands of centripetal xylem of exarch type, though not improbably in some cases shghtly mesarch, varying in size and shape and forming single or paired bundles. These strands represent the xylem of collateral leaf-traces similar to those of Lyginofteris but differing in the absence of well- defined centrifugal elements: the curved form of some of the xylem strands gives them an appearance similar to that of the leaf -traces of Lyginofteris. The leaf -traces, except in the lower part of their course through the pith, are double and pass through several internodes before the centripetal tracheids die out. The secondary xylem (fig. 463) is manoxyHc and very similar to that of Lyginofteris though rather less parenchymatous. The secondary phloem and cambium are often very well preserved. No endodermis and no distinct pericycle has been recognised. The cortex is parenchymatous and, like the pith and to some extent the phloem, contains numerous secretory sacs; in the outer cortex the presence of hypodermal strands is a prominent 1 Grand'Euiy (05). 216 POROXYLEAE [CH. feature. At an early stage in the growth of the stem a deep- seated phellogen forms secondary tissue both externally and internally and decortication ensues. Fig. 463. P&roxylon Edwardsii. A. Transverse section of stem. B. The central region of another stem of the same species. (A, v 9; University College Collection; B, from a photograph supplied by Prof. Bertrand of a specimen in the Renault Collection, Paris.) The bundle of each leaf-trace is accompanied by an arc of secondary centrifugal xylem as it passes through the secondary wood and this is retained in the leaf except in the finer veins. After entering the petiole the leaf-trace branches and an arc of XXXIIl] POROXYLON 217 bundles is produced, the concave side facing the upper surface of the thick lamina (fig. 464, A). Further reference is made to the structure of the leaves in the description of Poroxylon stephanense. The specimens of roots so far described are charac- terised by a diarch plate of primary xylem and two masses of secondary vascular tissue separated by two medullary rays opposite the protoxylems. Bertrand mentions the occurrence of roots of P. stefhanense with more than two protoxylem strands. The phellogen was produced in the pericycle as in the roots of recent Gymnosperms. It is suggested by Lignier^ that some sihcified rootlets from Grand' Croix (Loire) described by him as Radiculites reticulatus and at first compared with roots of Sequoia may belong to some Cordaitalean plant, possibly Poroxylon. Poroxylon Edwardsii Renault. This species 2 affords a good illustration of the generic characters already summarised. The strap-like leaves are fleshy and the occasionally forked, parallel or slightly divergent, veins are embedded in a homogeneous mesophyll with hypodermal strands of mechanical tissue. The pith consists of parenchyma in vertical series with scattered secretory sacs and differs from that of Cordaites and Mesoxylon in the absence of transverse discs. There are 13 primary-xylem strands close to the inner edge of the second- ary wood: the centripetal tracheids are scalariform or have multiseriate pitting like that in the secondary xylem. The structure of the leaf-traces is clearly shown in fig. 464 : the double trace seen in fig. 464, C, has two protoxylem-strands accompanied by some parenchyma, and these are almost enveloped by the metaxylem tracheids which abut on the secondary wood. At this stage in its course, that is just before bending outwards, the centripetal xylem reaches its maximum development and the trace forms a prominent and broad twin-strand in striking con- trast to the two narrower and tangentially extended strands shown in fig. 464, E, D. Each of these strands with a single protoxylem-group would at a higher level assume the broader and more compact form and contain two protoxylems as in fig. 464, C. The tracheids of the secondary xylem have 4 — 7 alternate 1 Lignier (IP). 2 Renault (80). 218 POROXYLEAE CH. Fig. 464. Poroxylon. A, B, Poroxylon Boysseti. A, transverse section of leaf in the region of lateral expansion of the petiole ; B, portion of vascular tissue of A. C — E, Poroxylon Edwardsii. C, leaf-trace showing recent separation of the two protoxylems ; D, leaf -trace at a lower level with more widely separated protoxylems, px; E, leaf-trace intermediate between C and D. (From photographs supphed by Prof. Bertrand.) XXXIIl] POROXYLON 219 rows of contiguous alternate pits on the radial walls : the medullary rays are 2 — 3 cells broad and may be 60 cells deep. According to Renault^ several small obhque pits occur on the radial walls of the ray cells. The secondary phloem, separated by a normal cambium from the xylem, forms a broad band of sieve- tubes with lateral sieve-plates like those in Medullosa anglica alternating with tangential rows of parenchyma. The cortex is relatively narrow and in older stems is chiefly occupied by secondary tissue formed from deep-seated phellogens. Poroxylon Boysseti Renault. The stems of this species agree closely with those of P. Edwardsii, the chief difference being in the structure of the secondary phloem which does not show the regular concentric alternation of sieve- tubes and parenchyma. Poroxylon stephanense Bertrand and Renault. This the oldest species, from Stephanian beds at Grand' Croix, differs in no essential features from the other representatives of the genus. It is from a study of the leaves of this type that Bertrand and Renault have obtained most of the facts with regard to the anatomy of Poroxylon foliage. In the median region of the fleshy leaf the bundles are characterised by a com- paratively large amount of centripetal xylem accompanied by a considerable development of secondary centrifugal tracheids : the bundles are connected laterally by both centripetal and centrifugal xylem and thus at certain levels in the lamina the vascular tissue has the form of a continuous plate (fig. 464, A, B). The veins become independent on branching and near the edge of the lamina they consist only of primary elements. Secretory sacs of elongated form are scattered in the homogeneous meso- phyll, and thick stereome-strands underHe the epidermis. The epidermal cells are rectangular and rows of stomata occur on both surfaces. B. CORDAITEAE. Cordaites. Unger. A preliminary statement with regard to nomenclature may serve to remove possible misconceptions in connexion with the 1 Renault (93) A. PI. lxxiv. fig. 8. 220 CORDAITEAE [CH. application of the generic name Cordaites. It has been the general practice to apply this name to certain forms of linear leaves which are particularly abundant in Carboniferous and Permian strata in Europe and North America, and in recent years a few palaeobotanists have substituted Cordaites for N oeggerathiofsis as the more suitable designation for Permo-Carbonif erous specimens abundant in the rocks of Gondwana Land. It has been customary to assign to Cordaites certain reproductive shoots, seeds, and stems described under the generic names Cordaianthus, Gordai- carpiis, Cordaicladus, Cordaioxylon, etc. Stems agreeing anatomi- cally in their main features with those of recent Araucarineae have long been attributed to Cordaites, but a few years ago a new type of stem was discovered which, though almost identical with that of Cordaites, is distinguished by the character of the primary xylem. For this new type the name Mesoxylon^ was proposed. Nothing is known as to the reproductive organs borne on Mesoxylon stems, but the leaves are externally at least indis- tinguishable from those referred to Cordaites. It is therefore obvious that when we apply the name Cordaites to leaves or other plant-organs, under that designation are undoubtedly included specimens belonging both to Mesoxylon stems and to stems with the characters of Cordaites {Cordaioxylon). Further research may enable us to subdivide Cordaites into more pre- cisely defined types distinguished by well-marked morphological characters, but at present the only course would seem to be to restrict the term Mesoxylon to petrified stems exhibiting the features of that genus and to retain Cordaites as a comprehensive designation in accordance with the general account of the genus given in the following pages. This widely distributed and mainly Palaeozoic genus is especially well represented in the coalfields of France where in some localities it contributed largely to the formation of seams of coaP, and it is chiefly from the researches of French Palaeobotanists that our knowledge of its morphology ^ is derived. Cordaites has shared the fate of most other abundant fossil plants in the distribution of its disjuncta membra among several genera and classes, but on the whole the information that 1 See page 270. 2 gee Vol. i. p. 76, fig. 13. XXXIIl] CORDAITES 221 is now available enables us to reconstruct the complete plant with a greater degree of confidence than is usually attainable. Cordaites may be described as a forest-tree closely resembling in habit and probably in size the recent Conifer Agathis, more especially such species as A. macrophyllus, A. vitiensis and others with leaves considerably longer than those of the Kauri Pine {A. australisy-. The main stem reached a considerable height before giving off scattered branches bearing spirally disposed, sessile, and often crowded leaves^ like the foliage of Agathis. The absence of any evidence of a two-ranked arrangement of leaves on lateral branches suggests a general tendency towards a vertical rather than a horizontal direction of growth. The sessile and closely set leaves for the most part of leathery texture vary considerably in length and breadth in different types (figs. 466 — 472) : in some the broadly linear lamina with its parallel veins and perfectly constructed I-shaped girders (fig. 465) reached a length of nearly 100 cm., in shape like the blade of a straight broad-sword or the leaves of a Yucca, torn by the wind into strips ; in other forms the lamina is shorter and more obovate, while in some the leafy shoots must have looked like slender stems of the smaller-leaved Bamboos. There is no proof that young vegetative branches with their spirally rolled leaves^ were protected by bud-scales, but some oval triangular scales (fig. 468, C), occasionally found in association with larger foliage-leaves, may have served that purpose. The branches from which leaves had recently fallen at the time of fossilisation are characterised by transversely elongated oval scars, occasionally showing a slightly curved row of pits like the marks of leaf-traces on the scars of a Horse Chestnut, sometimes terminating a feebly projecting decurrent leaf -cushion (fig. 466, C). The leaves persisted for a comparatively long period as in Araucaria imbricata, and on older leafless branches the scars are transversely stretched; the leaf-cushion loses its individuality and eventually the develop- 1 See Vol. IV. 2 For restorations, see Grand'Eury (77) A. PI. D; good examples of foliage- shoots are figured by Renault and Zeiller (88) A. Pis. Lxvi. Lxxxi. ; Grand'Eury (90) A. PI. LXiv. ; Kidston (02) B. PI. lxiv. fig. 2. 3 Renault (79) B. PI. xvi. fig. 1; Lignier (13^). Cf. Dolerophyllum, p. 133. 222 CORDAITEAE [CH. ment of secondary cortical tissue causes the exfoliation of the superficial bark. In the form and structure of the fertile shoots Cordaites parts company with Agathis; the trees bore no cones in the ordinary sense, but unisexual inflorescences — whether on one plant or on different individuals is uncertain — were produced in the axils or from a supra-axillary position as compound spikes or compact racemes. Both the longer female shoots and the shorter and more compact male branches are constructed on a similar plan. The ovulate inflorescence may exceed 30 cm. in length (fig. 479) ; a stout axis bears two-ranked linear bracts subtending short lateral bud-like shoots with one or several sessile or stalked ovules (fig. 480) between the sterile scales. The seeds are platy- spermic and agree much more closely with those of Cycads and Gingko than with the seeds of Conifers. The male inflorescence is on a smaller scale, in habit not unHke the elongated male shoot of Cephalotaxus fedunculata and some other Conifers; each bract subtends a small oval bud composed of imbricate scales and highly modified microsporophylls borne singly or in clusters (figs. 481, F ; 482). A microsporophyll consists of a comparatively long pedicel bearing at its apex a few long microsporangia. The term microsporophyll implies a morphological interpretation which is not accepted by all palaeobotanists, some of whom prefer to regard the microsporangia as stamens or microsporo- phylls reduced to their simplest terms and sessile on an elongated flower-stalk. The stem agrees very closely in its more important features with that of an Araucaria or an Agathis: the primary xylem forms the inner surface of the thick cylinder of secondary wood, merging gradually into it as in recent Conifers; there are no separate bundles of primary centripetal xylem. The medullary rays are narrow: in other words the secondary xylem is of the pycnoxylic type. The pitting of the tracheids is Araucarian and, as in Agathis, the leaf -traces arise as twin-bundles. The pith is larger than in the Araucarineae and more homogeneous in structure; it shares with the pith of Juglans and some other recent plants an almost constant tendency to assume a discoid structure. Anatomically the leaves agree more closely in the XXXni] CORDAITES 223 structure of the vascular bundles with Cycads than with Conifers though there are points of contact with both of these classes. The roots branch freely and their horizontally extended arms (figs. 468, A ; 478) suggest growth in swampy ground ; anatomi- cally they conform to the recent Gymnospermous type and there is good evidence that in some cases fungal mycelia lived symbio- tically in the cortex of coralline rootlets. Sternberg^ figured some leaves of Cordaites from Carboniferous rocks in Bohemia under the generic name Flabellaria in the belief that they belonged to a Palm. Brongniart substituted a new name Pycno'phyllum^ on the ground that Corda had disproved the supposed relationship with Monocotyledons. The name Cordaites was instituted by Unger^, his definition being based on leaf-form as well as on stem-anatomy. It has recently been proposed to revive the forgotten designation Pycnophyllum^j but the reasons given are hardly likely to induce botanists to discard the familiar generic name which perpetuates the memory of Corda. As already pointed out, the name Cordaites, even though employed in what has always been regarded a legitimate sense, is no doubt often given to specimens of some other alHed member of the Cordaitales which can only be recognised as such in the case of more completely preserved material. The naming of wood of the Cordaitean type, but which may equally well belong to another genus, raises a diflB.cult question : if there is satisfactory evidence from collateral sources that the wood is that of a Cordaites Grand'Eury's name Cordaixylon^ or Schenk's form Cordaioxylon^ may be used, though there seems to be no adequate reason against the use of the name Cordaites. If there is no con- firmatory evidence available and it is impossible to say whether the wood is that of a Conifer or a Cordaites, or some other plant with the same type of secondary xylem, Endlicher's term Dado- xylori^ is most conveniently employed. The confusion liable to follow from the use of the two generic names Dadoxylon and 1 Sternberg (23) A. PI. xvm. 2 Brongniart (49) A. p. 65. 3 Unger (50) A. p. 277. * Tuzson (09) p. 18. 5 Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 257. « Schenk in Schimper and Schenk (90) A. p. 243. ' EndHcher (47) p. 298. 224 CORDAITEAE [CH. Araucarioxylon for wood of the same type differing only in geological age is an argument in favour of extending Dadoxylon to all specimens having certain anatomical characters, which cannot be certainly assigned either to the Araucarineae or the Cordaitales, irrespective of geological age. The term Cordaicladus sometimes applied to branches is hardly necessary, but the sub- generic names Eu-Cordaites, Dory-Cordaites, and Poa-Cordaites, instituted by Grand' Eury for different forms of leaf, are frequently employed and serve a useful purpose as descriptive terms though the characters which they connote are of small importance and by no means always well defined or constant. For inflorescences it is customary to adopt the name Cordaianthus suggested by Grand' Eury as a substitute for Aniholiihus and some other terms. The same author uses Rhizo-Cordaites for roots. The nomenclature of seeds is more difficult : in a few instances seeds occur in organic connexion with Cordaitean shoots, but there is no doubt that many platyspermic Palaeozoic seeds preserved as detached fossils belong to Cordaites or some other member of the group. The difficulty is that in the present state of knowledge we cannot definitely determine in many cases whether a seed is Cordaitean or whether it belonged to a genus of Pterido- sperms. For this reason the account of several seeds that were probably borne on Cordaites or some aUied genus is given in a later chapter devoted to Gymnospermous seeds. There is no doubt that under the generic names Cardiocarfiis, Cordaicarpus, and Samaropsis are included true Cordaitean seeds, though it would be incorrect to say that all the seeds so named belong to members of the Cordaitales. Cordaites reached its maximum development in the Carboni- ferous and Permian periods; the genus or some closely allied types persisted into the Triassic and Rhaetic periods, and there is reason to beheve that the group was represented in some post- Rhaetic floras. The genus is one of many remarkable examples of the high degree of specialisation attained by Palaeozoic plants. The complex mechanisms represented by Cordaites and similar types give force to the conviction that we cannot hope to penetrate below the higher branches of the genealogical tree which had its roots in a period of the earth's history inaccessible to botanical XXXIIl] CORDAITES 225 investigation. The plants of the present age are to a large extent the result of evolutionary tendencies more correctly described as the result of degeneration or simplification than as the latest phase in a series composed of a succession of types gradually growing in complexity. Cordaites is essentially a generalised type, a composite product of an age characterised by an activity in the elaboration of the complex from the simple. Botanical records furnished by the geological series available for investigation furnish evidence of the sorting of characters among gradually diverging races and of changes in plant-organisation tending towards simplification and increased eflSciency. Cordaites, using the generic designation in a wide sense, occurs in Carboniferous and Permian strata in Europe, North America, and China; it is recorded from several localities in Kussia and Siberia for the most part from Permian rocks, from Permo-Car- boniferous (Lower Gondwana) beds in India, Australia, South Africa, and South America. Wood agreeing generally in the structure of its secondary tracheids with that of Cordaites is represented in Devonian rocks, and there can be no doubt as to> the existence of Cordaitalean plants in pre-Carboniferous floras. It is represented in the Rhaetic flora of Tonkin and has recently been discovered in strata probably of Rhaetic age in Mexico* Leaves. It is important to recognise the fact that leaves included under the generic name Cordaites were in many cases not borne on stems or branches with the anatomical characters of Cordaites. Scott in his account of the genus Mesoxylon says, ' I feel no doubt that most of the British specimens of Cordaitean leaves really belong to Mesoxylon, which is a much commoner type of stem in the Coal Measure petrifications than that of Cordaites itself^.' Some of the Cordaitean leaves were probably attached to stems of the Poroxylon type^ and it is not improbable that, as investi- gations are extended, additional genera of vegetative shoots will be discovered provided with leaves similar at least in external characters to those which it is customary to refer to Cordaites. In the present state of our knowledge we cannot make use of 1 Scott (12) p. 1024. 2 Grand'Eury (05). s. Ill 16 226 CORDAITEAE [CH. anatomical characters as criteria by which to distribute the foliage of the Cordaites form among the genera Cordaites, Mesoxylon, and Poroxylon, using these names as designations of certain types of anatomical structure. The specimen reproduced in fig. 465 is in all probability a piece of a leaf of Cordaites 'principalis, but on anatomical grounds Miss Benson^ has made it the type of a new species, C. Felicis, and more recently Scott^ has brought forward evidence supporting the view that it is a leaf of Mesoxylon. As, therefore, neither impressions nor petrifications of Cordaitean leaves can in the great majority of cases be referred with confidence to their respective genera of stems, pending fuller information the only course would seem to be to use the name Cordaites in a comprehensive sense indicating in special cases where evidence is available the more precise systematic position of the specimen. The classification of Cordaitean leaves proposed by Grand' Eury^ is based partly on the form of the lamina and in part on the equality or inequality of the ' veins.' The actual veins, which are embedded in the fairly thick mesophyll, do not directly affect the super- ficial ribbing on the carbonised impression of the leaves and, as seen in fig. 465, the most prominent hypodermal strands of sup- porting tissue which would appear as the main veins or primary ribs on an impression do not correspond in position with the vascular bundles. Although in some cases the largest stereome- strands coincide with the veins, forming the upper and lower parts of I-shaped girders the centre of which is occupied by the veins, this is by no means always the case. Grand' Eury has drawn attention to the difference between the upper and lower surface of some carbonised leaves : in C. crassifoliiis (fig. 468, D)* there are five to seven finer ribs between each pair of primary ribs on one face while the other shows ridges and grooves with a rib corresponding to each. Attention is called on a later page to the variable character of the ribbing even on different parts of the same lamina. The lower surface of the leaf, seen in section in fig. 465, would show a number of approximately equal ribs, or possibly primary ribs (midway between the veins) separated by two interstitial ribs, while on the upper face there would be 1 Benson (12). 2 ggott (12) p. 1022. 3 Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 208. ^ Grand'Eury (90) A. p. 321. XXXIIl] CORDAITES 227 three rather smaller secondary ribs. In a section of a leaf called by Renault C. crassus^, a specific name used also by Lesquereux^ for an impression of a leaf originally described by Goeppert as Noeggerathia crassa, there are deep stereome-strands between the veins next the lower epidermis alternating with single smaller strands, while on the upper surface the hypodermal strands occur only immediately above the veins. In a section figured by Felix^ from North Germany as C. robustus, the hypodermal stereome forms continuous bands; on the upper face the bands are uniform in thickness but next the lower epidermis they form a series of ribs. Grand' Eury's subgeneric terms Cordaites, Dory-Cordaites, and Poa-Cordaites have therefore very little value as regards differences in the ribbing of leaf -impressions : the large size of leaves included in Dory-Cordaites and the more acute apex of the lamina as compared with the obtuse apex of smaller leaves of Cordaites are features of limited application and of minor importance as diagnostic characters. The name Poa-Cordaites is, however, usefully employed for the narrower linear leaves with an obtuse apex. The structure of a Cordaites leaf is clearly shown in fig. 465; the lamina is approximately 1 mm. thick and there are about 30 veins in a breadth of 2 cm. Strong I-shaped girders with the webbing composed of thick-walled cells divide the mesophyll into rectangular compartments: the intervening hypodermal strands differ in number and size on the two faces. The epidermis is not preserved : specimens of other leaves show that the stomata^ occur in rows on the lower surface. The mesophyll shows no differentiation into palisade and spongy parenchyma, and in this respect the leaf agrees with many other forms ; but in some leaves the palisade-tissue is well developed, as in C. lingulatus Ren.^ The central region of the lamina consisted of lacunar tissue, portions of which are preserved, with a more compact sheath of parenchyma enclosing each vein. In some leaves there 1 Renault (79) A. PL xvi. fig. 7. ^ Lesquereux (78) p. 318. =^ FeUx (86) A. PI. m. fig. 1. 4 Renault (79) A. PL xvi. fig. 11 bis; WiUs, L. (14). 5 Renault (79) A. PL xvi. fig. 5; Stopes (03) PL ix. fig. 1; Lignier (IS^). 15—2 228 CORDAITEAE [CH. is a narrower sheath of thick- walled cells more sharply contrasted with the mesophyll. The vascular bundles agree in structure with those in the rachis of a Cycadean frond more closely than with the veins of an Araucarian or other Coniferous leaf. The xylem consists mainly of centripetal elements which form a deltoid strand with the protoxylem at the apex, and in close association with this is a larger or smaller amount of narrower centrifugal tracheids : in the section shown in fig. 465 the centri- fugal xylem may extend all round the centripetal tracheids, but it usually forms an irregular arch with its base attached to the sides of the larger tracheal strand, cp, separated, except at the Fig. 465. Cordaites leaf {Cordaites Felicis Bens.), probably borne on a Mesoxylon stem, cp, centripetal xylem ; ph, phloem ; jpx, protoxylem. (Kidston Coll. No. 2194.) base of the arch, by a small amount of conjunctive parenchyma from the centripetal xylem. The phloem is not preserved and is represented only by a few patches, fh, below the centrifugal tracheids. Dr Benson^ in her account of this type of leaf gives additional details and compares the anatomical features with those in other species. The dual nature of the xylem like that characteristic of recent Cycads has usually been regarded as a definite feature of Cordaites leaves ; Dr Stopes, on the other hand^ 1 Benson (12). XXXIIl] CORDAITES 229 interprets the narrower tracheids (occupying a position similar to those in fig. 465) in some sections of a leaf identified with C. frincifolis from Grand' Croix, as an inner sheath of transfusion elements ('primitive transfusion tissue') possibly derived from the centripetal xylem with which it is clearly connected at the sides precisely as in fig. 465; but in the Grand' Croix leaf the phloem is enclosed within the sheath of narrower tracheids and not external to it as it is in the section shown in fig. 465 and in a section of C. lingulatus figured by Dr Stopes. It is, however, difficult to recognise any fundamental difference between the 'inner transfusion tissue' and centripetal xylem. The cells of the outer sheath in Dr Stopes's specimens of C. principalis have bordered pits on their walls and this character is mentioned also by Renault in other specimens. Prof. Lignier^ has described the structure of fragments of adult leaves from the Stephanian of Grand' Croix (Loire) which he refers to Cordaites lingulatus, and the same author gives an interesting account of the anatomical features of a bud of the same species. The bud, which resembles in general appearance that of Dolerofhyllum (fig. 430, p. 133) is 3 cm. long, oval in transverse section — as the result of compression — and consists of four convolute leaves and a piece of a fifth. The outer leaves have 75 to 80 veins: the inner laminae are sinistral in their curvature while the three outer leaves are dextral. In the second, the first in which the tissues are recognisable, the small desmogen- strands afford some evidence that the phloem preceded the xylem in the order of differentiation as is often the case in recent plants. The first tracheids occur almost in the centre of the desmogen-strand and to these are added the other tracheids of the centripetal xylem, the oldest elements being spiral, the next scalariform and the later tracheids reticulate. The centrifugal xylem is formed at a later stage, and at about the same time are differentiated the elements called by Dr Stopes the inner sheath and by Lignier the 'bois diaphragmatique.' Lignier also describes the development and structural features of the other tissues of the young leaves and compares the anatomical features of the ^ Lignier (IS^). 230 CORDAITEAE [CH. French leaves with those of Cordaites Felicis described by Prof. Benson. The main features of Cordaites leaves are (i) the presence of two kinds of xylem in the veins, the larger centripetal tracheids, or chief water-conducting elements, and the narrower tracheids, in some cases attached to the sides of the centripetal xylem, in others forming free groups, usually between the protoxylem and the phloem, but sometimes enclosing the phloem ; (ii) the frequent presence of a well-defined sheath of cells round each vein composed of comparatively thick-walled elements comparable with the transfusion-tracheids in Conifers; (iii) the presence of lacunar tissue in the centre of the mesophyll and in some cases of trans- versely extended tracheids similar to those in some Podocarp leaves; (iv) a well-developed system of stereome-strands and I-shaped girders. The structural features on the whole suggest a xerophilous type, and the frequent absence or feeble develop- ment of palisade tissue points to diffused rather than to brilliant sunlight. The considerable range in size and form among Cordaitean leaves as well as the obvious dependence on conditions of preserva- tion or growth of such a relatively unimportant feature as the presence or absence of the so-called false or interstitial veins— the variability of which has been demonstrated in several instances — renders specific determination exceedingly difficult. The follow- ing species are briefly described rather with a view to illustrate the nature of the characters employed by authors than as imply- ing the existence of so many well-defined types. Cordaites principalis (Germar). This species was founded^ on a large specimen from the Coal Measures of Wettin showing a fan-like cluster of longitudinally torn and partially overlapping leaves spread out in the position that would be assumed on the compression of a shoot with a close spiral phyllo taxis. This form of Cordaites is the most abundant in the British Coal Measures. The broadly linear lamina is characterised by an obtuse apex (fig. 466, A), a tendency to split into strips, close-set parallel ribs, the stouter ribs or veins 1 Germar (48) B. p. 55, PI. xxm. XXXIII CORDAITES 231 Fig. 466. A. Cordaites principalis, part of leaf. B. Aftisia transversa, pith- cast. C. Cordaites principalis, branch with leaf -scars. (A, f nat. size; B, C, nat. size; Kidston Coll.) 232 CORDAITEAE [CH. separated from one another by 2—3 or it may be as many as 5 finer ribs or interstitial 'veins.' A statement by Weiss that in Ger mar's type-specimen the longitudinal ribbing of the lamina is very imperfectly preserved confirms the scepticism that is justly felt as to the validity of this character as a satisfactory specific criterion. The incomplete example shown in fig. 466, A, is 19-5 cm. long and has a maximum breadth of 3-5 cm., but the complete leaf was much larger and tapered gradually to the comparatively broad and slightly concave or amplexicaul base. The narrow elliptical proximal end of a specimen figured by Kidston^ from the Middle Coal Measures of Yorkshire is 2-8 cm. broad indicating that the tangentially expanded leaf-scars on a branch recently deprived of its foliage must have been a conspicuous feature. In his synonymy of this species Kidston^ includes Knorria taxina, a species founded by Lindley and Hutton^ on a piece of stem from the Coal Measures of Newcastle. The type-specimen, as Mr Howse* states, is much larger than the published drawing and closely resembles in the decurrent leaf-bases with broad apices the piece of stem represented in fig. 466, C, which Kidston identifies as C. ffincifalis. Geinitz^ refers to this species the seeds named Cordaicarfus Cordai (Gein.), but there is no evidence of connexion. Kidston^ points out that this seed is rare in Britain : he believes that Cordaianthus Pitcairnae (Lind. and Hutt.) is probably the inflorescence of C. frincipalis. Cordaites principalis occurs in both Carboniferous and Permian strata. The leaves described by Lesquereux^ from Pennsylvania as C. Mansfieldi agree closely with C. principalis. Another similar or possibly identical form is represented by C. Ottonis Gein.8 1 Kidston (93) A. PI. iv. fig. 16; (02) B. PI. lxiv. fig. 3. 2 Kidston (93) A. p. 352. ^ Lindley and Hutton (33) A. PI. 95. * Howse (88) p. 112, fig. 7. 5 Geinitz (55) A. p. 40, PL xxi. figs. 7—16. « Kidston (93) A. p. 355. ' Lesquereux (80) A. p. 537, PL lxxviit. 8 Geinitz (62) p. 148, PL xxxv. XXXIIl] CORDAITES 233 Cordaites horassifolius (Sternberg). The leaves of this species, originally referred to Flahellaria^, resemble those of C principalis but differ in the ovate-lanceolate and less obtuse apex and in the presence of only one or rarely two finer striations between the stronger ribs. Corda's drawing^ affords a good illustration of the crowded spiral disposition of the fohage comparable with that on an Agaihis shoot. The lamina is usually 4 — 8 cm. broad but in exceptional cases may reach a breadth of 12 cm. The species occurs in the Coal Measures, especially in the Westphalian series and in Permian rocks. FeistmanteP unites with this type Cordaianthus Pitcairniae (fig. 480, A), but as in other cases there may be a confusion between C. horassifolius and C. principalis. Leaves described by Les- quereux as C. communis'^ are, as White says, not distinguished by any well-marked characters from this species. White ^ figures some good examples of C. horassifolius from Missouri, reaching in one case a length of 40 cm., showing on the lamina the fructi- fications of a fungus, Hysterites cordaitis^ Grand'Eury. The leaves described from Canada and the United States as C. Robhii'' Daws, are closely allied to if not identical with Sternberg's type. Among other species differing in no definite character from C. horassi- folius is C. lancifolius described by Schmalhausen^ from the Permian of Russia. Cordaites lingulatus Grand'Eury. The leaves of this species^ are characterised by the obovate lamina and bluntly rounded or almost truncate apex; it affords a good illustration of the uncertainty of the ribbing as a diagnostic character. The lamina of a well-preserved specimen from the Blanzy coalfield described by Zeiller^^ reaches a length of 35 cm. and a breadth of 10 — 11 cm. decreasing to 4 cm. at the base (fig. 467). In the lower part of the lamina Zeiller describes the 1 Sternberg (23) A. PL xvm. ^ Corda (45) A. PL xxiv. fig. 8. 3 Feistmantel (72) p. 293. * Lesquereux (78). 5 White (99) B. p. 260, Pis. m. xvi. xlvi. * Zeiller records the same fungus on leaves of Cordaites {Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi from Tonkin; Zeiller (03) B. p. 151. ' Stopes (14) p. 82. 8 Schmalhausen (87) PI. vi. 9 Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 218, PL xx. figs. 1—4. i» ZeiUer (06) B. p. 182, PL xlvi. ; Grand'Eury (90) A. PL vn. figs. 1, 2. 234 CORDAITEAE [CH. Fig 467. Gordaites lingulatus. (After Zeiller; f nat. size.) XXXIIl] CORDAITES 235 ribs as unequal in prominence, the stronger ones being separated by 1 — 3 finer ribs, while in the middle and upper portions the ribs appear to be of equal size. Some of the finer ribs are due to folding of the lamina and are not represented, as are the ribs due to the presence of stereome-strands, by dark streaks in the detached cuticle. Reference has already been made to the anatomical features of leaves of this species described by Lignier^ and other authors. Cordaites grandifolius Lesquereux. The leaves so named by Lesquereux^, from the Coal Measures of Pennsylvania, are distinguished by the elongate cuneate lamina, which reaches a length of 38 cm. with a narrow base and a slightly rounded truncate distal end, 16 cm. broad, characterised by a few broad and shallow crenulations. By contrast with some American specimens in Dr Kidston's collection Lesquereux's figures convey an imperfect idea of the size of the leaf. A large leaf from the Coal Measures of Belgium described by Cambier and Renier as a new species of Psygmophyllum, P. Delvali^, is perhaps identical with the American type; the lamina of sub- triangular form has approximately the same dimensions; the veins are numerous and repeatedly forked. The leaf is much longer than any known Psygmophylhim and the veins are much more numerous than in P. majus Arb.*, the largest representative of that genus. Palaeobotanists who have seen the type-specimen inform me that they have no doubt as to the Cordaitean nature of the Belgian specimens, which may be designated Cordaites Delvali. It is, however, not impossible that Psygmophyllum and Cordaites are alHed genera : our knowledge of the former is limited to unimportant characters. Cordaites {Dory-Cordaites) palmaeformis (Goeppert). This Permian type, originally described by Goeppert^ as Noeggerathia palmaeformis, is characterised by numerous slender veins : according to Weiss^ there may be as many as 3 — 5 in 1 mm. 1 Lignier (IS^). 2 Lesquereux (78) p. 318; (80) A. PI. Lxxvn. 3 Cambier and Renier (10); Renier (10^) PI. 118. * See postea. ^ Goeppert (64) A. PL xxn. fig. 2. « Weiss, C. E. (72) p. 199. 236 CORDAITEAE [CH. The leaf is broadly lanceolate; it tapers gradually to an acute apex reaching a length of 80 cm. and a breadth of 10 cm. In habit the young foliage-shoots ^ resemble those of C. principalis and C. borassifolius. Grand' Eury records the frequent association of Samarofsis seeds with this species ; it occurs in Upper Carboni- ferous and in Permian strata and is recorded from a few British localities. Cordaites {Poa-Cordaites) microsiachys Goldenberg. Weiss^ first figured this species from drawings suppUed by Ooldenberg at whose suggestion the name C. microsiachys was adopted. The type-specimen consists of a slender axis bearing numerous narrow linear leaves and a few imperfect fertile axillary shoots. A specimen is figured by Kidston^ from the Upper Coal Measures of Radstock: it is a rare type in Britain. The species is readily distinguished from C. principalis and similar forms by the narrow lamina which varies considerably in length, rarely as long as 30 cm. and not exceeding 1 cm. in breadth. The apex is obtuse and the ribs are either equal in strength or 1 — 2 finer striae may alternate with the stronger ribs. The base of the lamina is 3 — 4 mm. wide and the leaf -scars have a slightly arched upper margin and an almost straight lower edge*. The foliage of this species, generally regarded as identical with €. linearis Grand'Eury, bears a close resemblance to that of the Mesozoic genus Phoenicopsis from which it is distinguished by the occurrence of the leaves in bunches. C. gracilis Lesq.^ is a similar type. The shoot on which Lesquereux founded his genus Desmiophyllum^ may perhaps be an example of Poa-Cordaites. Poa-Cordaites tenuifolius Schmal.^ from the Permian of Russia may be identical with C. microstachys. As examples of other forms of leaf referred to Cordaites, though as in other cases without any proof of connexion with branches having the anatomical features of the genus, reference 1 Grand'Eury (77) A. PI. xviii.; Renault and ZeiUer (88) A. PL lxvi. 2 Weiss, C. E. (72) p. 195. ^ Kidston (02) B. PL lxiv. fig. 2. * ZeiUer (80) A. p. 146, PL clxxv. fig. 1; Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 225; (90) A. PL VII. fig. 5; Renault and Zeiller (88) A. PL Lxvn. figs. 1, 2. 5 Lesquereux (80) A. p. 539. « Lesquereux (78) p. 322. ' Schmalhausen (87) PL vi. figs. 4—6. XXXIIIJ CORDAITES 237 may be made to Cordaites circularis Grand'Eury^ from Gard (fig. 468, B) and a smaller leaf from the same locality compared with C. Lacoei (fig. 468, C) Lesq. Cordaites circularis is characterised by the almost orbicular lamina traversed by slightly spreading veins ; it recalls some of the larger Cyclofteris pinnules of Pterido- sperm fronds and is indistinguishable from some leaves assigned to the genus Dolerophyllum^. Fig. 468. A, Cordaites root-system (Bhizo-Cordaites) ; B, Cordaites circularis leaf; C, Cordaites sp., cf. Cordaites Lacoei; D, Cordaites crassifoliu'i, upper and lower surface of leaf. (After Grand' Eury.) The species C. Lacoei was founded by Lesquereux^ on some detached specimens 3 — 12cm. long and 1-5 — 5cm. broad; it is by no means certain that a specimen referred by Grand'Eury* with some hesitation to this species is Cordaitean. The generic name Scuto-Cordaites was proposed by Renault^ for a specimen from Commentry consisting of a flattened branch bearing a few imperfectly preserved leaves. The surface of the branch shows semicircular leaf-scars on decurrent, spirally disposed leaf-cushions and bears a certain resemblance to a slender stem 1 Grand'Eury (90) A. p. 325, PI. vi. fig. 15. 2 Schmalhausen (87) PI. v. figs. 7—9. 3 Lesquereux (80) A. p. 535, PI. Lxxxvn. figs. 2 — 4. 4 Grand'Eury, loc. cit. p. 324; PI. iv. fig. 14. 5 Renault and Zeiller (88) A. p. 603, PI. Lxm. fig. 6. 238 CORDAITEAE [CH. of a Clathrarian Sigillaria. The leaves of the type-specimen of Scuto-Cordaites Grand' Euryi appear to be broadly linear, 13 cm. long, the breadth gradually increasing from the base: a short distance from the proximal end the lamina is broken up into narrow segments ; the veins are '5 mm. apart with finer striations between them. Some specimens from Pennsylvania made by Dawson^ the type of a new sub-genus and named Dictyo-Cordaites Lecoi agree in shape and arrangement with some species of Cordaites, but differ in an occasional anastomosis of the veins as in Psygmo- fhyllum flabellatum. It is, however, impossible to determine the true nature of the fossils from the published figures. CORDAITEAN LEAVES FROM InDIA, THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE, AND Siberia. Noeggera thiopsis, Feistmantel ; Rhipto- ZAMITES, ScHMALHAUSEN ; EURYPHYLLUM, FeISTMANTEL. \ Cordaites aequalis Goeppert. \Cordaites (Noeggerathiojpsis) Hislopi (Bunbury). In 1845 Goeppert^ instituted the species Noeggerathia aequalis (fig. 469) and N. distans for incomplete broadly linear and obovate leaves, from Siberian Permian strata, having a contracted base and equal parallel veins. The specimens so named are no doubt specifically identical. Goeppert's species N . aequalis has recently been carefully investigated by Zalessky^ who agrees with Kosmovsky* in identifying it with Noeggerathiopsis Hislopi (Bunb.) and Rhiftozamites Goepperti Schmal. Schmalhausen^ had previously pointed out the probable identity of his species with Noeggerathia palmaeformis Goepp. (= Cordaites). The question of specific identity of these leaves from different localities and of other hardly distinguishable forms is of secondary import- ance ; the main point is that they are all examples of Cordaitean leaves, Cordaites or some allied genus, and point to the existence of this group of Gymnosperms during Permo-Carboniferous times in Siberia, China, India, Australia, South Africa, and 1 Dawson (90) p. 3. ^ Goeppert (452) p 7^ pis_ xxvii. xxvin. ' Zalessky (12) p. 36; (122). gee also Gothan (11). 4 Kosmovsky (92). « Schmalhausen (79) A. p. 32; ZeiUer (96) A. xxxin CORDAITES 239 B Fig. 469. A— C, E, Cordaites aeqtialis; D, Cordaites Clerci. (After Zalessky, f nat. size.) 240 CORDAITEAE [CH. S. America, also in the Rhaetic floras of Tonkin^ and Mexico^. The fragments from Devonian strata at Iguana Creek, Australia, named by McCoy^ Cordaites australis are probably pieces of the rachis of some large frond. Wieland* recently discovered Cordaitean leaves exhibiting a wide range in size and shape in the Mixteca flora of Mexico in the lower members of a series which extends from the 'upper borders of the Rhaetic' through the Liassic to the lower beds of the Inferior Oolite. These leaves are referred to N oeggerathiofsis Hislofi, and it is clear from an examination of photographs received from Dr Wieland, one of which is reproduced in fig. 470, that the Mexican Cordaites cannot be specifically distinguished from Bunbury's type as represented by specimens described from India, South Africa, Siberia, Tonkin, and elsewhere. The occurrence of Noeggerathiopsis is also recorded by New- berry from the Rhaetic series of Honduras^. Noeggerathiopsis. This genus was founded by Feist mantel^ for some leaves from Lower Gondwana rocks in India originally described by Bunbury'^ as Noeggerathia {Cyclofterisi) Hislopi (figs. 470 — 472) and regarded by him as probably Cycadean. Several authors have added to our knowledge of this widely spread southern type and in many localities the leaves occur in association with platyspermic seeds of the Samarofsis or Cordaicarfus type, pieces of stems with Cordaitean leaf-scars, and petrified wood agreeing in the structure of the secondary xylem with that of European species of Cordaites. In some Permo-Carboniferous sandstones at Vereeniging, South Africa, stumps and spreading roots (fig. 478) resembhng those described from France by Grand'Eury (cf. fig. 468, A) have also been discovered. A remarkable occurrence of roots and prostrate stems of some forest-tree was recorded some years ago in the bed of the Vaal river near Vereeniging where the surface of a seam of coal was exposed over an area of more than two acres ^. Large 1 Zeiller (03) B. For other references see Seward (14). 2 Wieland (13). ^ McCoy (74) B. Decade iv. p. 22. 4 Wieland (13). ^ Newberry (88) p. 350. « Feistmantel (79^) p. 23; (80^). ' Bunbury (61) B. p. 334. 8 Mellor and Leslie (06) B. XXXIIll CORDAITES 241 } \\\ I II Fig. 470. Cordaites {Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi. From Mexico, (After Wie- land; | nat. size.) Fig. 471. Cordaites {Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi. From Vereeniging. (A, ca, I nat. size; B, ca, ^ nat. size.) 16 242 CORDAITEAE [CH. branched roots (fig. 478) spreading over the coal for a distance of several feet and thick stems 40 — 50 ft in length with very- few branches and but little decrease in diameter afford a striking picture of a forest-floor. The frequent occurrence of Cordaites (Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi in the associated strata suggests a reference of the stems and roots to that species. Moreover the Fig. 472. Cordaites (Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi. From India. (Calcutta Museum; f nat. size.) structure of the secondary xylem of some petrified pieces of stem sent to me by Mr LesHe from Vereeniging agrees closely with that of a European Cordaitean stem. The leaves of Cordaites (Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi vary con- siderably in size, in some cases reaching a length of 80 cm. (fig. 471) ; XXXIIl] CORDAITES 243 the lamina tapers gradually from a short distance behind the obtuse apex to a relatively narrow base: in venation and form the leaves are very similar to those of C. principalis and other European and North American species. The specimen from India represented in fig. 472 shows several spathulate leaves attached in a close spiral to a branch. As White^ and Zalessky have shown, the stronger ribs are separated by less prominent striations indicating the presence of two sizes of hypodermal strands. The obvious resemblance between Noeggerathiofsis Hislopi and species of Cordaites has long been recognised and many authors have included Feistmantel's genus in the Cordai- tales^. Prof. Zeiller^ preferred to retain the name Noeggerathiopsis as a precautionary measure, chiefly on the ground that the stomata appeared to be less definitely arranged in rows and more scattered than in the European leaves of Cordaites, and because of the absence of interstitial veins. We have as yet little informa- tion as to the arrangement of the stomata, but in view of the irregularity in stoma tal grouping in recent leaves this feature is, perhaps, of minor importance. The presence of interstitial * veins ' has now been established in Indian* and South American^ leaves. In a paper pubHshed in 1908^ the name Cordaites was substituted for N oeggerathiofsis and Zalessky' s recent work supports this step. The description by Zalessky of the ribbing in Goeppert's species Cordaites aequalis from Siberia shows how uncertain and variable a character the venation is even in different parts of the same leaf. Cordaites Clerci Zalessky. This species (fig. 469, D) was instituted for some small lanceo- late or spathulate leaves from the Petschora basin (Adzva Kiver)' reaching a length of 6 cm. and a breadth of 1 cm. It is separated from Cordaites aequalis on the ground that the veins are more numerous, as many as 44 in a breadth of 1 cm. A recent investigation by Miss Holden^ of the carbonised 1 White (08) B. p. 549. . 2 Arber (03) B. p. 178, gives references to other authors. 3 Zeiller (03) B. p. 149, PI. xl. ^ Zalessky (12). 6 White (08) B. p. 549. « Seward and Leshe (08) B. p. 120. ' Zalessky (13) p. 20, PI. n. figs. 4—6. * The results have not yet been published (September, 1915). 16—2 244 CORDAITEAE [CH. cuticles of some Indian specimens, sent to Cambridge by the Director of the Indian Geological Survey, and a comparison of them with preparations made from European Cordaites leaves, have revealed certain distinguishing features which support Zeiller's view that the Gondwana-Land leaves, though similar superficially to those of Cordaites, are probably distinct. It is, however, impossible in many cases to obtain any information with regard to epidermal characters, and though it would seem probable that had we a fuller knowledge of the Indian and southern hemisphere plants represented for the most part by leaf-impressions well- defined distinguishing features would be recognised, the compre- hensive name Cordaites may conveniently be retained on the ground that in the absence of well-preserved cuticles no satis- factory distinguishing features are exhibited by the impressions, of Noeggerathiofsis. Phylladoderma. Zalessky. Phylladoderma Arheri Zalessky. Zalessky^ founded this genus on some Permian leaves from the Petschora basin (Adzva River) which closely resemble those of Cordaites but are characterised by a coarser venation. The lanceolate lamina reaches a length of 18 cm. and a breadth of 4-2 cm. ; the veins are 2 mm. apart and occasionally forked near the base of the leaf. The epidermal cells have straight walls and stomata are abundant on the lower surface. As Zalessky says, the systematic position of the leaves is uncertain though they are probably Cordaitean. The coarseness of the venation is a feature of minor importance and hardly worthy of generic recognition. Rhiptozamites Schmalhausen. This genus was instituted by Schmalhausen^ for leaves from beds in the Kusnezk basin regarded by him as Jurassic. These strata are now recognised as Permian^ and homotaxial with those from which Schmalhausen* subsequently recorded the same species. The leaves, though smaller than many of the Indian and South African specimens of Cordaites (Noeggerathiofsis) 1 Zalessky (13) p. 23, Pis. i. fig. 4; ii. figs. 7, 9; iii. figs. 3, 5—8, 10, 11. 2 Schmalhausen (79) A. p. 29. ^ Zeiller (96) A; (02). * Schmalhausen (87) B. p. 37. XXXIIl] CORDAITES 245 Hislofi, may belong to that species. Zeiller and others definitely- assigned the Russian leaves to Cordaites. Euryphyllum. The Indian leaves for which Feistmantel^ proposed this name are, as several writers have pointed out, in all probability referable to Cordaites. The general conclusion to be drawn from this imperfect summary of an extensive literature is that the employment of the generic names Noeggerathiopsis, Rhiptozamites, Euryphyllum, and others has tended to exaggerate the difference between the European and Southern botanical provinces during the Permo- Carboniferous period. Scale-leaves, seeds, and stems. The occurrence of small scale-like leaves of the type represented in fig. 468, C, in association yf\t\iCordaites (Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi^ in India, Brazil, Siberia, and elsewhere may mean that these organs are scales of large fohar buds. The occurrence of several forms of platyspermic seeds, in some cases apparently identical with European forms and sometimes distinct types, in close association with Cordaites (Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi has already been mentioned. Examples of such seeds are described in Chapter xxxv. under the genus Samaropsis. There are very few satisfactory examples of Cordaitean branches from the southern hemisphere. Schmalhausen^ figures good specimens from Siberian rocks from which his Rhiptozamites leaves were obtained. Branches with spirally disposed leaf-scars figured by Zeiller* from the Rhaetic of Tonkin closely resemble Cordaicladus. Feistmantel's drawing of a fossil from the Kar- harbari series, compared by him with a Fern rhizome^, may be a Cordaitean branch, and the same author describes a stem^ from New South Wales as Caulopteris Adamsi which bears a close resemblance to a branch of Cordaites. Similarly a leafy shoot described from India by Zeiller as Araucarites Oldhami'^ may be compared with branches of the Poa-Cordaites type. 1 Feistmantel (792) p^ 26; Arber (05) B. p. 186. 2 Feistmantel (82) p. 42, PI. xiv.; White (08) B. PI. x; Schmalhausen (87) B. 3 SchraaUiausen (87) B. Pis. v., vn. * Zeiller (03) B. PI. xl. 5 Feistmantel (79^) PI, xm. fig. 6. « Feistmantel (90) A. PI. xxi. figs. 1, 2. » Zeiller (02) B. PI. vn. fig. 6. 246 CORDAITEAE [CH. Stems, i. Pith-casts. Artisia. Sternberg. A character to whicli authors tend to attach excessive import- ance as a diagnostic feature is the almost invariable tendency of the parenchymatous pith of Cordaites to break up on contraction into transverse diaphragms, thus producing what is known as a discoid pith. In the stem shown in fig. 473 the pith is repre- sented by a more or less cylindrical cast characterised by fairly regular transverse ribs and narrow grooves; in the upper part Fig. 473. Cordaites (or Mesoxylonl) stem showing the discoid pith partially enclosed by wood. (^ nat. size.) M. S. of the fossil the peripheral tissue of the pith is preserved in the form of narrow plates projecting from the inner face of the wood. As Kenault^ pointed out, this type of pith is the expression of certain conditions of growth and is not a satisfactory distinguishing feature of any particular genus or family. The same tendency to form a discoid pith is characteristic of Mesoxylon, and it occurs also in some other Palaeozoic genera. Corda long ago figured a stem attributed by him to Lomatofloyos with a typical discoid pith, and a similar pith is recorded in a stem of Dicranophyllum^. Among recent plants Juglans regia affords perhaps the most familiar instance of an identical form of pith : the same type 1 Renault (79) B. p. 287. 2 Renault and ZeiUer (88) A. PI. lxxi. XXXIIl] ARTISIA 247* occurs in the white Jasmine, in Ceropegia feltata, and some other flowering plants. An interesting case is that of the tree Groundsel, Senecio praecox D.C.^, of Mexico: in this plant, which grows in arid districts, the pith serves as a water-store and as the water is drawn off the thick turgescent discs contract and form thin transverse diaphragms separated by wide spaces, as is also the case on drying in some succulent Euphorbia stems. It may be that in Cordaites the medullary region also served as a water- reservoir and the depth of the medullary discs would vary according to the state of their contents. The earher writers regarded the pith-casts as stems with scars of amplexicaul leaves : Artis^ described specimens from the English Coal Measures as Sternbergia, one of which he stated to be 6 ft long ; a few years later Sternberg^ proposed the name Artisia and this has been generally used on the ground that Sternbergia is the name of a recent flowering plant. A specimen of Artisia transversa (Art.) from the Coal Measures of Yorkshire is shown in fig. 466, B, and similar specimens varying considerably in diameter up to about 10 cm. are abundant in European and American Coal Measures. The prominence and depth of the transverse ridges, the presence or absence of anastomoses between adjacent discs are, as Zeiller* says, of very doubtful value as specific characters. Dawson in 1846^ spoke of Artisia as probably the pith of a tree, a view suggested to him by Mr Dawes. In 1851 Williamson^ pubhshed a description of some specimens in which a pith-cast, Artisia approximata Lind. and Hutt., was enclosed by wood showing very clearly Cordaitean characters. Further demonstration of the true nature of Artisia was supplied by Grand'Eury from St fitienne material. If the generic name Artisia is applied to all pith-casts showing the transverse ridges and grooves like those seen in fig. 466, B, it must be remembered that it is not safe to assume a connexion with Cordaites or Meso- xylon. A Liassic species described by Lignier' from France as 1 Harshberger (98). 2 ^rtis (25) A. PI. vm. ^ Sternberg (38) A. p. 192. For examples of Artisia, see also Renault and ZeiUer (88) A. p. 581, PI. lxv. 4 ZeiUer (06) B. p. 189. « Dawson (46) p. 135. « Williamson (51). ' Lignier (95) PI. vn. fig. 13. 248 CORDAITEAE [CH. Artisia alternans is quoted by authors as evidence of the persistence of Cordaites into the Jurassic period; but in view of the fact that the discoid type of pith is not by any means confined to Cordaites or even to the Cordaitales the occurrence of Artisia is in itself of no great botanical significance. It is also true that a discoid pith is not an invariable attribute of stems closely allied to the genus Cordaites ; but if these reservations are made the use of the generic term Artisia serves a useful purpose. ii. Petrified stems. Dadoxylon. Endlicher. Palaeobotanical literature contains numerous desci;iptions of Palaeozoic petrified wood occasionally enclosing an Artisia pith- cast described under such names as Dadoxylon, Cordaioxylon, Araucarioxylon, etc., and regarded as portions of Cordaitean stems. It is, however, certain that much of this material belonged to stems other than those of Cordaites. Recent research has demonstrated the insufficiency of the secondary xylem alone, however well preserved, as a safe guide to generic position : stems identical in the structure of the secondary xylem differ in that of the primary portion of the stele, and it is on the characters of the latter tissues that several genera have recently been founded. Mesoxylon affords a striking example of the importance of the primary xylem as a distinctive feature. As Gothan^ points out, the species of Calamofitys recently made the type of a new genus Eristophyton^ would, in the absence of the primary xylem, probably be regarded as Cordaitean. It is important to recognise the limitations imposed by the imperfection of the material; we cannot in most cases determine whether a specimen should be referred to Cordaites or Mesoxylon, and while it may be described as probably Cordaitean in affinity there remains the possibiUty that some of the Palaeozoic plants with secondary wood like that of Cordaites, if their reproductive organs were known, would not be included in the Cordaitales. Goeppert's species Araucarites Tchihatcheffi, which Renault^ quotes as Cordaites, has recently been assigned to a new genus Mesopitys^ because of certain 1 Gothan (05) p. 28. 2 gee page 199. 3 Renault (79) B. p. 288. * See page 295. XXXIIl] DADOXYLON 249 distinctive features of the primary xylem. Additional examples might be quoted pointing to the tendency of recent and more thorough investigation to establish the fact that the occurrence of Permo-Carboniferous wood of the Araucarian type does not necessarily denote the existence of Cordaites. The question of nomenclature is necessarily raised in this connexion. In recent years it has been customary to assign Palaeozoic wood with Araucarian pitting to the genus Dadoxylon, while wood of the same general type from more recent strata is by many authors referred to Araucarioxylon^ . This arbitrary dis- tinction based on a difference in age is open to serious objection. Fossil wood of the Araucarian type is widely scattered in strata ranging from Carboniferous to Jurassic periods; it also occurs in later formations. The fact that on the one hand Araucarian plants, as recognised by cones and foHage-shoots, are especially characteristic of Jurassic floras and occur more rarely in Rhaetic and Triassic floras, and on the other hand that Cordaites and its alHes reached their greatest development in Permo-Carboniferous times, renders it probable that in the majority of cases a distinc- tive name based on geological age would be in accordance with botanical differences. But we have no satisfactory data as to the upper limits of the Cordaiteae or the lower limits of the Araucarineae : in all probability the two families overlapped and co-existed for more than one geological period. It is, moreover, the plants from formations where overlapping occurred that arc the most critical from a botanical standpoint. The age-distinction is therefore at best an artificial one and may be seriously mis- leading. Potonie^ and Gothan^ have emphasised the desirabiUty of adopting the name Dadoxylon for all wood of the Araucarian type irrespective of age. If a particular specimen can be correlated definitely with Cordaites or some other genus it should be so designated, but the fragmentary nature of the records usually precludes this simple course. The most logical plan is to use the name Dadoxylon for all woods with Araucarian characters if there is no sufficient reason for employing a less provisional term. If 1 Felix (86) A. p. 56; Knowlton (90); ZeiUer (95) B. p. 627; Penhallow (00) p. 54. 2 Potonie (02) p. 229. 3 Qothan (05) p. 13. 250 CORDAITEAE [CH. the evidence clearly points to the Araucarineae the generic name Araucarioxylon should be added in parentheses after Dadoxylon, but whether or not this is done, a statement as to the geological age of the fossil will in itself be some assistance in enabling the student to form an opinion on the balance of probability in favour of a Cordaitean or an Araucarian affinity. The course suggested by Gothan^, namely to add Cordaites after Dadoxylon if an Artisia pith is present, is rendered inoperative now that we know that a discoid pith occurs in more than one genus. In this chapter we are concerned primarily with Cordaites and with such stems as may fairly be regarded as Cordaitean: examples of fossil wood from later formations are dealt with in another place. A distinc- tion between Araucarioxylon and Cordaioxylon stems has been based by Felix on the nature of the pith-casts; those of the Artisia type he refers to Cordaioxylon, while Palaeozoic stems with Tylodendron pith-casts are assigned to Araucarioxylon'^. This distinction can, however, only be made in the comparatively few cases in which the pith-cast is preserved. Its validity is, moreover, open to question. A Tylodendron (= Schizodendron) cast shows on its surface the characters of the inner face of the secondary xylem, projecting spindle-shaped areas representing the inner ends of medullary rays and a reticulum of grooves formed by the more resistant and prominent inner edges of the rows of tracheids (fig. 746). A pith-cast of a stem in which the destruction by decay of the medullary parenchyma had not extended to the edge of the xylem-cyhnder might show transverse diaphragms. The occurrence of Tylodendron casts means that decay had extended to the surface of the wood. But in view of the occurrence of Tylodendron casts in stems that are not those of Cordaites a short account of the genus is given on another page^. The main features of the stem of Cordaites have already been enumerated. The stele agrees with that of Araucaria and Agathis and especially with Agathis in the double nature of the leaf-trace. Williamson* in 1877 described pieces of wood from the English 1 Gothan (05) p. 15. 2 sterzel (03). 3 See Chap. xlv. * WiUiamson (77) A. p. 226, Pis. vii.— ix. ; (80) A. p. 516, PI. xx. fig. 16; (83^) A. p. 470. XXXIIlJ DADOXYLON 251 Coal Measures and the Lower Carboniferous of Scotland which he referred to Dadoxylon but without any specific name. These include the Coalbrookdale stem in which he had previously- demonstrated the connexion between Artisia and Dadoxylon, The structure of the xylem is Uke that in D. Brandlingii and the specimens may belong to that species. The most interesting fact recorded by Williamson is the occurrence of double leaf- traces, a feature which led him to suspect a remote generic affinity to Ginkgo. This double trace may be an important diagnostic feature but unfortunately the majority of descriptions of species of Dadoxylon throw no Hght on the character of the foHar bundles. Thomson and AlUn^ have recently pointed out that a double leaf-trace occurs in a stem from the Permian of Kansas described by Penhallow^ as Pityoxylon chasense and referred to that genus because of the supposed occurrence of resin-canals in some of the medullary rays : the canals are apparently leaf -traces traversing broad rays in the secondary wood. The primary xylem of Cordaites is in direct continuity with the secondary tracheids and does not form mesarch strands as in Mesoxylon. The pith is usually discoid. The pitting on the tracheids is a character of special importance: while it is true to say that as a rule the number of pits on the radial walls of a single tracheid is larger than in the Araucarineae, this is not always the case. In Araucaria there are occasionally as many as five rows of alternate polygonal pits (fig. 691, A) and in some Palaeo- zoic Dadoxylons there are only one^ or two rows. The very broad zone of transitional elements at the inner edge of the xylem- cy finder is a characteristic feature shared by the Araucarineae*; the spiral protoxylem-tracheids are succeeded by scalariform elements and these, by the gradual anastomosing of the transverse bars, pass into tracheids with multiseriate pitting. In this broad zone we probably have a primitive feature, an epitome in a single stem of the course of development of multiseriate from scalariform pitting. In some Palaeozoic species with wood of the pycnoxylic type and agreeing generally with typical Cordaites 1 Thomson and AUin (12); Thomson (13) p. 14. » Penhallow (00) p. 76. 3 White (08) B. p. 583. * Seward and Ford (06) B. p. 341. 252 COflDAITEAE [CH. the bordered pits are sometimes separate and circular, and opposite pits occasionally replace the usual alternate arrangement. Another feature on which stress has been laid is that in Cordaites the pits occupy the whole breadth of the tracheal wall ; but this, though frequently the case, is by no means a constant feature. In Dadoxylon Newberry i^ the pits tend to form groups, leaving unpitted areas, as in the genus Coenoxylon'^. In the stem of Dadoxylon materiarum Daws, represented in fig. 475 the pits do not always cover the whole of the tracheid- walls : this stem is also instructive as an example of the different appearance presented by pitted tracheids according to the state of preservation. In some places an oblique pore is well shown while in others only the outer border of the pit is seen. Gothan^ has described a specimen in which some of the pits are circular and occupy only the central area of the xylem elements: separate circular pits occur also in D. Pedroi Zeill.* (fig. 476). Similar departures from the normal are illustrated by recent species of Araucarineae. The absence of a torus is another feature shared by Dadoxylon and true Araucarian wood. Annual rings other than incomplete and spasmodically formed rows of narrower tracheids are not as a rule present, and in this respect also Araucaria affords a close analogy. Thomson^ has figured a transverse section of a root from English Coal Measures in which rings of growth are well defined; and other instances are recorded. In an Austrahan species named by Arber D. australe^, there are well-marked rings of growth, and this is equally the case in some Indian wood^ of Permo-Carboniferous age, more nearly allied to Mesoxylon than to Cordaites, and in a Dadoxylon of similar age from South Africa. On the other hand the statement that annual rings occur in Palaeozoic wood is often incorrect, partial rings having been confused with regular concentric cy finders of summer elements. Dawson and Matthew^ described rings in D. ouangondianum, and Goeppert and StenzeP, who examined the Canadian material, 1 PenhaUow (00) p. 64, fig. 12. 2 gee page 293. 3 Gothan (05) p. 16. « See page 259. 5 Thomson (13) p. 19. « ^rber (05) B. p. 191. See postea, p. 256. ' An account of this wood is being published by Miss Holden. 8 Matthew (10) p 77, Pis. i., 11. * Goeppert and Stenzel (88) p. 10. XXXIIl] DADOXYLON 253 refer to circles like annual rings ; but Penhallow^ states that there is no evidence of true growth-rings. The medullary rays are uniseriate and consist of thin paren- chymatous cells with unpitted walls; they vary considerably in depth, usually comparatively shallow but in some cases 40 or 50 cells deep. In recent Araucarineae the rays are generally shallower. The absence of special receptacles, other than occasional resiniferous tracheids, for products of secretion is a feature common to Dadoxylon and the Araucarineae. The phloem presents no features of special interest, but our knowledge of this tissue is comparatively meagre. Among other examples of large Dadoxylon stems some of which no doubt bore Cordaitean foliage — though as a rule we have insufficient information as regards anatomical characters to enable a decision to be made between Cordaites and Mesoxylon — reference should be made to the imposing array of silicified trunks in the grounds of the Chemnitz Museum^. These were obtained from Lower Permian strata at Hilbersdorf near Chemnitz from beds overlain by porphyry tuff and resting on quartz porphyry, the volcanic material which furnished the siliceous solutions. Several large pieces of wood were found in association with stems of Medullosa and Psaronius, leaves of Cordaites, Artisia pith- casts, and Cardiocarpiis seeds with specimens of Walchia, Gompho- strobus and other plants. Sterzel describes a stem 16-5 met. long and 1-5 met. in diameter; on the main trunk the branch- scars are scattered but on some branches there is a tendency to a whorled arrangement. This and many other stems are referred to Araucarioxylon (or Dadoxylon) saxonicum, a species first de- scribed by Reichenbach as Megadendron saxonicum. In one specimen Sterzel states that the bordered pits are generally in 1 — 2 rows, though rarely in 3 — 4 rows, on the radial walls of the tracheids which they do not completely cover: the medullary rays reach a depth of between 20 and 30 cells. It is noteworthy that the stem ] 6-5 met. long has a pith-cast of the Tylodendron type. 1 PenhaUow (00) p. 67. 2 Sterzel (00); (03); (12). See also Goeppert (80). 254 CORDAITBAE [CH. Dadoxylon (Cordaites) Brandlingii (Lindley and Hutton). 1831. Pinites Brandlingii Lindley and Hutton, Foss. Flor. Vol. i. PL i. 1850. Araucarites Brandlingii Goeppert, Foss. Conif. p. 232, Pis. xxxix. — xli. 1890. Cordaioxylon Brandlingii Schenk, in Schimper and Schenk, p. 853, fig. 408. This species was founded on 'a fossil giant of the vegetable kingdom ' discovered at Wideopen near Newcastle in Carboniferous strata on the estate of Mr BrandHng. The stem, 72 ft long and far from complete, showed an irregular and not a whorled distri- bution of branch-scars. It is noteworthy that in D. medullar is (Goepp.)^, a Permian species from Saxony, the branch-scars, while for the most part irregularly scattered, in one case showed an approach to a whorled disposition as in recent Araucarias. Witham^ gave a fuller account of the structure of the stem than is included in the original description, and the species has been described by many later authors from both Permian and Carboni- ferous localities. The pith is discoid and the broad transitional region at the inner edge of the wood is a characteristic feature^. Thomson* points out that there is a tendency to a retention of the scalariform type of pitting in the region of the medullary rays. There are 1 — 5 rows of pits on the radial walls of the tracheids. The rays may reach a depth of 40 cells; they are usually one cell broad. It has recently been shown that as many as six vascular strands^ may form one leaf-trace instead of the customary pair, a feature suggesting comparison with Meta- cordaites Rigolloti Ren. with its five fohar bundles. Other species agree very closely with D. Brandlingii and it is impossible to determine with accuracy the precise specific limits of stems agreeing generally with this type ; but for the sake of emphasising the variation in anatomical structure it is worth while to draw attention to a few more or less divergent forms from different geographical areas. 1 Goeppert and Stenzel (88) PI. ii. fig. 14. 2 Witham (33) A. 3 Scott (09) B. p. 528, fig. 190. See also Penhallow (00) p. 62, with references to literature. * Thomson (13) p. 19 6 Ibid. p. 16. XXXIIlJ DADOXYLON 255 Dadoxylon protopityoides Felix. An interesting feature in this Westphalian type from Germany is the occurrence of transversely elongated pits on the tracheids^ associated with those of normal form closely simulating the pits in the xylem elements of Protofitys, Dadoxylon nummularium White. In this BraziUan wood^ from Permo-Carboniferous beds the medullary rays are very numerous, mostly uniseriate and 1 — 30 cells in depth. The pits on the tracheids are in 1 — 2 rows and are often contiguous. In another type, D. meridionale, described by the same author^, the pits are strictly uniseriate and generally contiguous. As White says, the absence of the pith and cortex and of any evidence as to the structure of the primary xylem renders impossible any definite expression of opinion as to the affinity of these and many other species. Dadoxylon Nicoli Seward. Dr Arber* in naming this species, from the Newcastle (Permo- Carboniferous) Series of New South Wales, Dadoxylon australe, does not mention Crie's earher account of some wood from New Caledonia under the name Araucarioxylon australe^. The latter generic name according to the usage adopted in this volume should be superseded by Dadoxylon, and this necessitates a fresh specific name for Arber's specimens. The name Nicoli is suggested in place of australe, as the sections on which Arber founded his species form part of the Nicol collection in the British Museum. The xylem shows distinct rings of growth, a feature also seen in Indian stems of approximately the same geological age and recorded by Shirley^ in wood from Queensland which needs more careful examination. The bordered pits, usually multiseriate and contiguous, are not infrequently in 1 — 2 rows and separate. The uniseriate mediillary rays are very numerous as in White's Brazilian species D. nummularium, and as a rule 6 — 12 cells deep. Some well-preserved specimens from Permo-Carboniferous strata 1 Felix (86) A. PL v. fig. 4. ^ ^^ite (08) B. p. 579, PI. xm. 3 Ibid. p. 583, PL XIV. * Arber (05) B. p. 191, figs. 40—43. 5 Crie (89). « Shirley (98) p. 14; Arber (05) B. p. 201. 256 GORDAITEAE [CH. in Natal and Zululand have been described by Warren^ as Dado- xylon australe Arb., showing interesting anatomical features, but the material almost certainly includes more than one specific type and would repay more detailed investigation. Dadoxylon maieriarum Dawson. This species was described by Dawson ^ from Carboniferous strata in Nova Scotia and afterwards referred by Penhallow^ to the genus Cordaites. In the transverse section reproduced in fig. 474, A, the tracheid-walls have been reduced in thickness by partial decay, but some of the bordered pits are clearly shown on the radial walls ; the pits usually form 2 — 4 contiguous rows (fig. 475) in some cases with an oblique pore while others are represented either by the outer border of the pit or by the pore only. The narrow medullary rays are as a rule uniseriate and may be 60 cells deep (fig. 474, ' B). Dawson states that some specimens have large Artisia pith-casts, a fact that formerly would have been regarded as proof of the Cordaites nature of the wood, but in the absence of evidence with regard to the nature of the primary xylem it is impossible to say whether the stem is Cordaites or Mesoxylon. Dadoxylon sp. Some wood received from Mr Leslie, collected at Vereeniging^ South Africa, in Permo-Carboniferous rocks, shows well-defined rings of growth. The pits form either a single row, a double, alternate and contiguous row, or rarely three series on the tracheid walls. The medullary rays are usually uniseriate and 1 — 30 cells deep. Dadoxylon Kayi Arber. This species is represented by some large trunks, in some cases with a diameter of 40 cm., discovered by Mr Kay in the Coal Measures of Worcestershire*. The pith is very small and shows no indication of a discoid structure, but owing to its poor preserva- tion no sections could be obtained of this region. The secondary wood is characterised by the large number of uniseriate medullary 1 Warren (12). 2 Pawson (632). 3 Penhallow (00) figs. 13, 14, 17. « Arber, E. A. N. (132).. XXXIII I DADOXYLON 257 Fig. 474. Dadoxylon materiarum. Transverse (A) and tangential (B) sections of the secondary xylem. (Kidston Coll. 222, 224.) ABC Fig. 475. Dadoxylon materiarum. A — C radial longitudinal sections of the secondary xylem. (Kidston Coll. 225.) S. Ill 17 258 CORDAITEAE [CH. rays 1 — 27 cells in depth; the tracheids have usually two or sometimes three rows of alternate and contiguous bordered pits on the radial walls. Arber regards the absence of a discoid pith as a fatal objection to a reference of the stems to Cordaites and speaks of them as affording further evidence of the occurrence of Coniferae in the higher Coal Measures of the Midlands. It is, however, impossible to determine the position of the species in the absence of any data with regard to the structure of the peri- medullary region, and without such information we are hardly justified in regarding Dadoxylon Kayi as a member of the Coni- ferales. Dadoxylon Pedroi Zeiller. This species from Upper Carboniferous or possibly Lower Permian strata in Brazil^ has a pith 3-8 cm. in diameter composed of parenchyma with scattered secretory sacs and characterised by the occurrence of three equidistant bays projecting into the cyHnder of wood (fig. 476, A) which extend through the length of the specimen (6 cm.) : these, as Zeiller suggests, may be con- nected with the departure of leaf -traces or branches. The xylem is entirely composed of centrifugal elements and shows a broad transitional zone (fig. 476, B) including spiral, scalariform, and reticulate tracheids, but the bordered pits are less numerous and less crowded than in many species of Dadoxylon. The rays are 1 — 2 cells broad and reach a depth of 50 cells. The most striking features are the solid and not discoid pith with its three rounded bays and secretory canals, also the smaller number and frequently circular form of the pits on the tracheids. Zeiller considers that the stem is that of some Cordaitean plant though probably not a true Cordaites. White^ questions the advisability of adopting the generic name Dadoxylon and suggests the possibility, though without any satisfactory evidence, that it is the stem of a Ganga- mopteris. Failing further information, there would seem to be no sufficient reason for the institution of a distinctive generic name. 1 Zeiller (95) B. p. 619, PI. ix. figs. 8—19. 2 White (08) B. p. 577. XXXIIl] DADOXYLON 259 Dadoxylon permiense (Renault). This Permian species from Autun^ differs from typical examples of the genus in the differentiation of the pith into a central thin- walled region contracted into transverse diaphragms surrounded by a cylinder of stouter tissue and in the greater breadth of the Fig. 476. Dadoxylon Pedroi. A, transverse section showing the pith and part of the secondary wood. B, longitudinal section of part of the secondary wood. (After Zeiller.) medullary rays. The tracheids have 3 — 4 rows of pits of the usual type. Spirally disposed, decurrent, leaf -bases occur on the surface of the stem, and the cortex includes secretory canals and strands of hypodermal stereome. A small number of veins pass up the median part of the lamina which in this respect and in its 1 Renault (96) A. p. 350; (93) A. PI. lxxvit. 17—2 260 CORDAITEAE [CH. greater thickness differs from that of Cordaites leaves. Renault speaks of the rays as a cycadean feature, but they are only two cells in width and shorter than in recent Cycads. Dadoxylon spetsbergense Gothan. In this species^ from Spitzbergen, of doubtful age though probably Palaeozoic, there is no xylem-parenchyma and the medullary rays are from 2 to 5 cells deep; the bordered pits occur in 1 — 2 or rarely 3 rows on the radial walls of the tracheids ; they are alternate but not flattened and characterised by their small size (7/x, high); they do not cover the whole face of the tracheids. It is pointed out that in many Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Dadoxylons the pits are larger than in recent species (16 — 17-5/x as compared with 9 — 12/x) while in D. spetsbergense they are still smaller. The large size of the medullary-ray cells is another noteworthy feature, also the absence of annual rings, a character possibly connected with conditions of growth in northern regions. It is, however, pointed out by Nathorst^ that the fossil was not found in situ and, as he says, it may have been carried by currents from a more southern locality. Metacordaites. Renault. Metacordaites Rigolloti Renault. Renault founded this species^ and genus on a stem from Autun which, like D. Pedroi, differs in certain respects from stems usually attributed to Cordaites. The pith is solid and contains secretory ducts and cells; the tracheids have often a single row of pits, and multiseriate pitting is much less common than in Dadoxylon. The medullary rays are generally 1 — 6 cells deep. A striking feature is the occurrence of groups of five vascular bundles penetrating the secondary wood in V-shaped groups, each group being regarded as a multiple leaf-trace, a type recently recognised by Thomson in D. Brandlingii. In one of Renault's figures a larger scar, presumably a branch-scar, is shown imme- diately above a group of foliar bundles. The genus Metacordaites is considered by its author to be intermediate between Conifers 1 Gothan (10) p. 5, PI. i. figs. 1—3. 2 Nathorst (IP) p. 222. s Renault (96) XXXIIl] CORDAITES 261 and the Cordaitales, but nearer to the former. This conclusion is, however, based on insufl&cient evidence, as nothing is known of the reproductive organs. Roots. In 1871 Williamson^ gave an account of a petrified plant from the Lancashire Coal Measures which he named Dictyoxylon radicans, but he afterwards came to the conclusion that the specimens so named were portions of the subterranean axis of some other plant, possibly AsterophylUtes, and proposed a new generic term Amyelon'^. In 1874 he brought forward fresh evidence in support of connecting Amyelon radicans with Aster ofhyllites or Spheno- 'phyllum, genera which Williamson believed to be very closely related. It has since been recognised that Amyelon is the root of Cordaites or of some closely allied member of the Cordaitales. Our knowledge of Cordaitean roots is based chiefly on the work of Williamson and Renault^, and more recently Osborne* has added new facts of considerable interest. In the larger roots the primary xylem may be diarch or there may be as many as four or five protoxylem groups (fig. 477). The primary tracheids are spiral or scalariform and the space, s, separating them from the surrounding secondary xylem seen in fig. 477, B, was no doubt originally occupied by conjunctive parenchyma. The secondary wood is composed of tracheids, with contiguous bordered pits identical with those in the xylem of the stem, and narrow medullary rays. The section, 4 mm. in diameter, represented in fig. 477, A, shows a tetrarch primary xylem strand enclosed by secondary wood composed of rather thin- walled elements succeeded by a zone of phloem including some secretory sacs, and beyond this is a cylinder of periderm, p. In a section of a root figured by Renault from Autun the periderm is separated from the stele by a broad band of parenchyma which appears to be cortical, but in the British specimens the deep-seated origin of the periderm is clearly shown: Osborne states that it arises in a layer imme- diately outside the endodermis. In one of the specimens figured 1 WiUiamson (722). 2 wmiamson (74) A. p. 67. 3 Renault (79) B. p. 294, PL xv. figs. 13—17. See also Scott (09) B. p. 631, fig. 191. * Osborne (09). 262 CORDAITEAE [CH. by Williamson^ the secondary wood shows clearly marked irregular concentric lines simulating rings of growth, but there is no evidence of any regularly recurring variation in the diameter of the xylem- elements. From the descriptions of Williamson and Osborne it Fig. 477. A, root of Cordaites. B, centre of the root enlarged; p, pemderm; s, space. (Kidston Coll. 1906.) is evident that the roots of Cordaites were profusely branched and, as the latter author has shown, the method of branching points to the formation of coralline roots like those of recent Cycads, some Conifers and Dicotyledons. Osborne found that the cortex 1 Williamson (74) A. PI. ix. fig. 56. XXXIIl] CORDAITES 263 of small rootlets is composed of two zones, an outer parenchyma without cell-contents and an inner parenchymatous tissue charac- terised by the occurrence in some of the cells of tangled masses of fungal hyphae almost always unseptate. In some cases the hyphae bear terminal vesicles similar to those observed on fungal hyphae in the cortex of Podocarpus roots. Osborne makes out a good case for regarding the fungus as symbiotically related to the tissues of the lateral roots, a relationship identical with that in many existing trees, particularly Myrica and Alnus. It is suggested that the formation of the coralline root-tubercles is a feature consistent with the view that Cordaites lived in saline marshes, a physiologically dry habitat favourable to the occurrence of mycorhiza. Fig. 478. Root {Cordaitest) exposed in the bed of the Vaal river. (After Mellor and Leslie.) Reference has already been made to the habit of Cordaitean roots in the general account of the genus (figs. 468, A, 478). The specimen shown in fig. 478 may be a root of Cordaites (Noegger- athiofsis) Hislopi, but nothing is known as to its structure^. 1 Mellor and Leshe (06) B. 264 cordaiteae [ch. Reproductive Organs. Cordaianthus. Grand' Eury. We have as yet no definite knowledge of the nature of the re- productive organs of Mesoxylon and Poroxyhn, but having regard to their close resemblance in other respects to Cordaites, particularly in the case of Mesoxylon, the presumption is that some of the seeds and fertile shoots attributed to Cordaites may belong to other members of the Cordaitales. Despite the abundance of Cordaites, or at least of material assigned to that genus, and the comparative frequency of fertile shoots in actual connexion with foliage-shoots, the practical identity of Mesoxylon and Cordaites leaves precludes any confident use of the latter name in a strict sense. In 1822 Brongniart^ described a small bud-like fossil of Tertiary age as Antholithes liliacea, and this generic name in the form Aniholithus became widely used for fertile shoots or flowers from different geological horizons. As knowledge became more precise other names replaced Antholithus , though Renault^ retained it for some inflorescences from Commentry which could not definitely be included in Cordaites. Lindley and Hutton^ employed the genus for a specimen, now recognised as a Cordaitean fertile shoot, from the Coal Measures which they called Antholithus Pitcairniae, the specific name being chosen to indicate a possible affinity to the Bromeliaceous genus Pitcairnia. A few years later Morris* described a similar inflorescence as A. anomalus. In 1872 Carruthers^ substituted Brongniart's term Cardiocarpon for Antholithus and called A. Pitcairniae Cardiocarpon Lindley i and Morris's species C. anomalum. The specific name Lindley i has been widely adopted, but there would seem to be no adequate reason for disregarding the priority-rule. It is, however, cus- tomary to use Grand' Eury 's term Cordaianthus for all Cordaitean inflorescences. Goeppert^ suggested the name Botryoconus for an inflorescence similar to C. Pitcairniae and for this C. E. Weiss' substituted Noeggerathianthus on the ground that he considered Goeppert's specimen to be the male inflorescence of Noeggerathia. 1 Brongniart (22) A. PI. xiv. fig. 7. ^ Renault and ZeiUer (90) A. p. 593. 3 Lindley and Hutton (33) A. PI. lxxxii. * Morris (40) A. PI. xxvm. fig. 5. » Carruthers (72^) B. « Goeppert (65) p. 152. ' Weiss, C. E. (69) B. p. 201. XXXIIl] CORDAITES 265 Grand' Eury resuscitated Botryoconus^ for some spikes from the Gard coalfield connected by liim with Dory-Cordaites. The nature of the seeds borne by the inflorescences has largely influenced authors in the choice of a generic name : Carruthers used Cardio- carpon while Zeiller^ speaks of Samaropsis Pitcairniae. The genus Cardiocarpon was founded by Brongniart for compressed cordiform seeds, but it was not until later that their gymnospermous nature was recognised. Further reference to the nomenclature of seeds of the Cardiocarpon type will be found in Chapter xxxv. The correlation by Grand' Eury and other authors of different species of inflorescences and species of Cordaites is frequently based on association, and in the absence of more satisfactory evidence the safer course is to deal with Cordaitean fertile shoots in a general sense. (a) Ovulate shoots. These are represented by a considerable number of forms in both European and American localities. In rare cases the compound shoot reaches a length of 30 cm. (fig. 479), but it is usually much shorter ; the lateral compact buds may be more or less widely separated : the seeds have long pedicels (fig. 480, A) or appear to be sessile (fig. 480, B) and there may be one or several seeds on a single lateral shoot. The seeds are platy- spermic and, as seen in fig. 480, A, in some inflorescences they show very clearly the Samaropsis features. It would, however, be unsafe to assume that all Samaropsis seeds -^ .,,,. ^ ^ • .^ . ^ Fig. 479. Cordatanthus. were borne on Cordaitean plants. Among From the Middle Coal other types of seed referred by authors to Measures of Lanca- Cordaites are Cardiocarpus, Cordaicarpus, Sarco- ^^''^- (Manchester Museum; -^ nat. size.) taxus, Taxospermum, Diplotesta, and Lepto- caryon. But in most cases there is no evidence of actual connexion 1 Grand'Eury (77) A. p. 299; (90) A. p. 330. ^ Zeiller (00^) B. p. 211. 266 CORDAITEAE [CH. between seeds and vegetative organs, and while it is possible to state with confidence that many of the seeds represented by impressions described as species of Samarofsis and Cordaicarpus are undoubtedly Cordaitean, it is certain that not all seeds refer- able to these genera were borne by Cordaitalean plants. Cordaitean seeds are characterised by certain morphological features recalling those found in recent Cycads and in the seeds of Ginkgo as illustrated by species of Cardiocarpus and some allied types. As most of the Palaeozoic seeds known in a petrified state cannot be assigned to their parent-plants they are dealt with in a separate chapter^. Cordaianthus Pitcairniae (Lindley and Hutton). This type of inflorescence^ is considered by Kidston to belong to the tree which bore leaves known as Cordaites principalis, but if this is the case it is probable that the stem possessed the anatomical characters of Mesoxylon, Fig. 480. A, Cordaianthus Pitcairniae with Samaropsis seeds. B, Cordaianthus Volkmanni. W, portion of B enlarged. (A, B, nat. size; Kidston Coll. 2374, 1174.) The portion of an inflorescence shown in fig. 480, A, from the Middle Coal Measures of Yorkshire, illustrates the occurrence of ^ See Chap. xxxv. 2 Lindley and Hutton (33) A. PI. lxxxii.; Carruthers (723) B. p. 7; Kidston (03) B. p. 782; (11) p. 235. XXXIIl] CORDAIANTHXrS 267 the bud-like fertile shoots and the stalked Samaropsis seeds. A species described by Eenault^ from Commentry as Cordaianthus acicularis may be identical with the British species. Cordaianthus VolJcmanni Ettingshausen. The example of this species^ seen in fig. 480, B, shows the relatively small size of the lateral buds, presumably unexpanded, compared with the large subtending bracts. Petrified specimens of Cordaianthus. Our knowledge of the structure of Cordaianthus is based on the researches of Kenault^, supplemented by those of Prof. Bertrand* to whose kindness I owe the photographs reproduced in fig. 481. The inflorescences described by Renault are referred by him to different species, but in the following brief account these are treated from a generic standpoint. The tangential section of Cordaianthus Williamsoni Ren. shown in fig. 481, D, was originally figured by Renault and more recently by Bertrand ; it shows the spirally disposed leaf-traces in the lower part of a stout axis, and at the sides some vascular bundles are seen pass- ing up into the bracts. A very small proportion of the bracts subtend ovules ; two are seen at a and b, and at c is the tangentially cut micropylar canal of a third borne near the apex and covered by the terminal cluster of bracts. The ovule a, separated by a narrow space from its short stalk, consists of a thick single integu- ment— not two as stated by Renault — extended at the apex as a micropylar canal: the apical extension is more completely shown in the tangentially cut ovule b. The central body is much contracted and the two spaces, s, at the base are regarded by Bertrand as cavities in the integument separated from one another by a central strand of conducting tissue which gives off two bundles to the integument, one at each end of the long axis of the seed (fig. 481, A, v). The dark patch, n (fig. D), is the upper and broader end of the shrunken nucellus the apex of which extends upwards as a slender beak, and this originally no doubt fitted into the micropyle. Fig. 481, C, shows a female inflorescence 1 Renault and Zeiller (90) A. p. 592, PI. Lxxiii. fig. 31. 2 Ettingshausen (522) p. 5^ pi_ y. 3 Renault (79) B. p. 304. * Bertrand, C. E. (11). 268 CORDAITEAE [CH. Fig. 481. A, B, Cordaianthus Grand'Euryi, ovule showing apex of nucellus, B, with microspores, j); pc, pollen chamber; b, beak of nuoellus; v, vascular bundle. C, transverse section of fiower-bud with ovules, a, b. D, Cordaianthus Williamsoni, longitudinal section; a — c ovules; s, spaces; n, nucellus. E, Cordaianthus Zeilleri, transverse section showing four large ovules and one aborted ovule (a); v, vascular bundle. F, transverse section of male flower; m, microsporangia. (From photographs supplied by Prof. Bertrand.) XXXIIl] CORDAIANTHTJS 269 in transverse section; the stele consists of a ring of bundles separated by broad medullary rays and enclosing a comparatively large pith: the leaf -traces are seen in the cortex and one is cut through as it bends out into a bract which is not yet free from the axis. Two ovules, seen in section at a and 6, are represented by the bilaterally symmetrical and compressed integument enclosing small pieces of nucellar tissue. Fig. 481, E, is a trans- verse section of an inflorescence at a higher level and above the apex of the axis: there are four large ovules and one aborted ovule, a. Bertrand describes two vascular bundles in the integu- ment of the ovule a, one at each end of the long axis. Fig. 481, A, B, Cordaianthus Grand'Euryi E-en., shows a longitudinal section of the nucellus, 1*5 x -7 mm., and part of the integument of an ovule at the time of polHnation, which was probably aided by the secretion of a drop of mucilage as in the ovules of recent Conifers. The integument, separated by a broad space from the nucellus, is cut in the plane of the two vascular strands, v. From the centre of its broad upper surface the nucellus projects upwards as a beak, 6, and this originally engaged with the micropylar canal formed by the integument: the hghter patch below the beak is the pollen-chamber (fig. 481, B, pc) containing two microspores, and two more, p, are seen above the nucellar beak. In another species described by Renault, C. Lacattii, the nucellus fills the space bounded by the integument. (b) Staminate inflorescences. The male inflorescence, though smaller, is similar in habit to the ovulate shoot: the secondary branch consists of a short axis bearing crowded, spirally disposed, bracts, and the actual flowers are represented by single stamens or groups of 2 — 3 highly speciaHsed microsporophylls. Each microsporophyll consists of a long filament with a central vascular strand bearing at its apex 3 — 4 long microsporangia (fig. 481, F, m) which open longitudinally as seen in fig. 482, A. The micro- sporangia are 2-5 — 3 mm. long covered by dark paHsade cells and thin- walled parenchyma, shown as indistinct patches in the photograph. Some of the elHptical and comparatively large microspores are seen in fig. 482, B ; the exine is finely punctate and inside are the remains of a few thin cells in which presumably 270 CORDAITEAE [CH. spermatozoids were developed. The microspores shown in fig. 482, B, have a maximum length of 0-1 mm. : Kenault describes some as 0-9 mm. long while others are much smaller. Fig. 481, F, is a transverse section of a staminate inflorescence showing near the centre five groups of microsporangia, each sporangium having the form of a curved incomplete dark band indicating that de- hiscence has occurred. A Fig. 482. Cordaianthus. Microsporangia, A, and Microspores, B. (University College Collection, London.) Mesoxylon. Scott and Maslen. This generic name was instituted for stems obtained by Messrs Lomax from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire^ previously referred by Scott^ to Cordaites and Poroxylon. Further investigation showed that while agreeing closely with those genera they possessed certain distinctive features demanding recognition. The name chosen suggests the intermediate nature of the stems. The more striking features may be summarised as follows: In the largest specimens so far described the stem. Scott and Maslen (10); Scott (12). 2 Scott (09) B. pp. 511, 526. XXXIIl] MESOXYLON 271 including leaf-bases, reaches a diameter of 5 or 6 cm. ; the large pith consists in the central region of diaphragms of parenchyma separated by horizontal spaces produced by splitting and shrinkage consequent on the failure of the tissue to keep pace with the general growth of the stem. The secondary xylem is of the Araucarian type and has narrow medullary rays varying in depth from 1 to 25 cells. The leaf -traces are represented by twin- bundles which fuse in the downward direction, the level at which fusion occurs being regarded as a specific character. The presence of centripetal xylem is an essential feature of the traces : the occurrence of single or double traces consisting of centripetal elements and, externally, a large amount of centrifugal xylem is an important feature in which Mesoxylon differs from Cordaites. The double leaf-traces divide after emerging from the secondary wood and each strap-Uke leaf receives several collateral bundles (fig. 483, C). An axillary bud may occur at the base of each leaf (fig. 483, A, b). The phloem, including sieve-tubes and secretory sacs, is succeeded by a broad pericycle, and the com- paratively narrow cortex is traversed by successive bands of periderm. In the outer region of the cortex the presence of radial bands of fibres is a characteristic feature. The reproductive organs are unknown. The anatomical features are well illustrated by M. Sutcliffii first described by Scott, who provisionally placed it in Poroxylon, and afterwards more fully investigated by Maslen^. Mesoxylon Sutcliffii Scott. The average diameter of the stem is 3 cm. : the section repro- duced in fig. 483, A, has a maximum breadth of 3-5 cm. ; the leaf-bases cut at different levels give an irregular contour to the surface like that of a Lepidodendron. An axillary bud, either reproductive or vegetative, is seen at b consisting of a short axis bearing crowded bud-scales. The leaves are crowded and according to Maslen have a phyllotaxis of ^ : the lamina is linear like that of Cordaites with 16 collateral bundles in the petiole. The presence of a meristematic band at the base of the lamina affords evidence of a deciduous habit. The large size of the pith is a striking feature with its central tissues in the form of transverse diaphragms 1 Maslen (11). 272 OORDAITEAE [CH, cp P^c-P Fig. 483. Mesoxylon Sutcliffii. Transverse sections of stem. A. a, outer pith ; b, axillary bud; x^ secondary xylem. B. cp, cf, centripetal and centrifugal xylem; px, protoxylem. C. It, leaf -traces in the cortex; s, stele of axillary branch; ph^, secondary phloem. D. Leaf -trace bundles, It, external to the phloem, ph^. (A, C, D, sections in the Manchester Collection, 717 6; B, Cam- bridge Botany School, 530.) XXXni] MESOXYLON 273 and a narrower peripheral zone of solid parenchyma (fig. 483, A, a). The secondary wood of the stele is composed of tracheids with 2 — 3 contiguous alternate rows of bordered pits on the radial walls, but none on the tangential walls. In the stem shown in fig. 483, A, the secondary wood is preserved only in patches. Numerous blunt teeth varying in prominence project into the pith ; these consist chiefly of serially disposed centrifugal tracheids distinguished by their spiral and scalariform structure and by the medullary rays which are broader than those in the more external xylem. Further reference is made to these perimedullary strands in the description of the leaf -traces. The medullary rays are uniseriate and usually 1 — 6 cells in depth: beyond the secondary wood is a cambium and a cylinder of secondary phloem (fig. 483, D, ph^) consisting of tubular elements, presumably sieve-tubes, and elongated secretory sacs. The pericycle is com- posed of several rows of rather large and short cells and has an ill-defined outer boundary. A succession of arcs of periderm-like tissue and phellogen, which may invade the pericycle and phloem, forms a prominent feature in the cortex; radially placed bands of fibres similar to those in Lyginopteris and other genera occur in the outer cortex. At the edge of the pith the more prominent projections of xylem are arranged in pairs (fig. 483, B) and as each pair travels downwards the component strands gradually fuse^. Each bundle of a double trace consists internally of an arc of centripetal xylem, the elements of which are arranged in rows (fig. 483, B, cp), with a single protoxylem group in the middle of the inner face, px. It is not clear whether any primary centrifugal tracheids are present, but there are indications that such are occasionally represented. In most cases the primary xylem of the leaf-traces is exarch, but the existence of mesarch bundles is not improbable. The bulk of each foliar bundle is formed of a fan-shaped mass of secondary centrifugal xylem (fig. 483, B, cf) and an island of parenchyma occurs next the protoxylem. There is no clearly defined boundary between the outer or centrifugal xylem of the leaf-traces and the tracheids of the stem-wood ; the latter may consist exclusively of tracheids 1 Maslen (11) PI. xxxiii. figs. 3—5. s. m • 18 274 CORDAITEAE [CH. with bordered pits or the inner rows of the xylem-cylinder may be of the scalariform or spiral type. Differences shown in transverse sections of the inner portion of the xylem are due to the circum- stance that in certain parts of the inner face of the secondary wood leaf-traces are unrepresented, while in other places the dwindled remains of the outer, centrifugal, portions of a trace are still recognisable. As each double leaf -trace passes down the pith the bundles fuse and the single strand retains for a time some centripetal xylem; this gradually disappears and at a lower level the centripetal xylem also dies out. The space enclosing the obtuse apices of the bundles shown in fig. 483, B, was originally occupied by thin-walled tissue which accompanied the trace in its outward course. In Mesoxylon Sutcliffii the leaf- strands pass almost horizontally through the secondary wood, bend outwards in the phloem and follow a steeply ascending course to the leaves. In fig. 483, B, a double leaf-trace is seen at the inner edge of the secondary wood with the centrifugal xylem, cf, continuous with that of the stele : fig. 483, D, It, shows a leaf-trace in the pericycle where one of the bundles has divided and the other is tangentially extended and partially divided. The branching is carried further in the cortex, as seen in fig. 483, C, where the trace is represented by a curved row of six bundles, It, and at a higher level further subdivision may occur. The leaf-bundles are collateral and in the leaf retain both centripetal and centrifugal tracheids. In the section shown in fig. 483, C, the oval stele of an axillary shoot is seen at s subtended by the row of collateral bundles : the stele has a fairly large pith surrounded by a zone of secondary xylem with broad medullary rays. Among other species of Mesoxylon mention may be made of M. Lomaxi and M. poroxyloides. M. Lomaxi Scott and Maslen^ generally resembles M. Sutcliffii but shows the following distinctive features: the leaves are more scattered and less crowded; the twin-bundles of the leaf-traces fuse immediately on entering the pith, thus appearing for the most part as single and not double 1 Scott (12) p. 1012, Pis. Lxxxvn., lxxxix. XXXIII] MESOXYLON 275 strands in the perimedullary zone; the centripetal xylem is well developed, the medullary rays are deeper and the outer cortex has shorter bands of mechanical tissue. In Mesoxylon foroxyloides Scott and Maslen^, the twin- bundles of the traces unite soon after reaching the pith as in M. Loynaxi ; the secondary tracheids have only two rows, or sometimes a single row, of bordered pits and the tracheids are rather smaller than in M. Lomaxi (20 — 40ju, as compared with 30 — QOfji) and the medullary rays are shallower. There is a particularly broad zone of spiral and reticulate transitional tracheids at the inner edge of the wood as in Cordaites and in Dadoxylon Pedroi (fig. 476). The leaves of this species are beUeved to be represented by the type described by Dr Benson as Cordaites Felicis (fig. 465) 2, but, as already suggested, it is very probable that many or possibly nearly all the leaves from British Coal Measures described as Cordaites may belong to Mesoxylon. The chief interest of the genus Mesoxylon is its close resemblance in certain characters to Cordaites and Poroxylon: the presence of strands of centripetal xylem in the perimedullary region is an important feature in which Mesoxylon differs from stems assigned (under the generic name Dadoxylon) to Cordaites. Meso- xylon differs from Poroxylon in having a discoid pith like that of Cordaites, but a more important difference is the absence in the leaf-trace xylem of Mesoxylon of bordered pits of the Araucarian type, whereas in Poroxylon Araucarian pits occur in both the centripetal and centrifugal tracheids. In Poroxylon the secondary xylem is manoxylic ; in Mesoxylon, as in Cordaites, it is pycnoxylic. The range of Cordaites and a consideration of other imperfectly known genera. An increased precision in knowledge derived from anatomical investigation often tends to demonstrate the untrustworthiness of criteria based on external features previously employed with confidence. This inevitable though, from the point of view of the systematist, inconvenient result of intensive study is well illustrated by the recent discovery of the stems named by 1 Scott (12) p. 1017, Pis. Lxxxvm., xc. 2 Benson (12). 18—2 276 CORDAITEAE [CH. Scott and Maslen Mesoxyhn^, A separation of Cordaites from Mesoxylon, which no doubt extended far beyond the British area, is possible only if well-preserved petrified material is available. The leaves of Mesoxylon, so far as our imperfect knowledge of them enables us to express an opinion, are con- structed on a plan almost identical with those of Cordaites and, as already stated, it is almost certain that many of the impressions referred to Cordaites were borne on Mesoxylon stems. An addi- tional source of confusion is supplied by the Cordaites-]ike leaves of Poroxylon. It is evident, therefore, that even within the limits of the Carboniferous and Permian formations the recognition of true Cordaites leaves must often be attended with considerable risk of error. Apart from the possible confusion between the foUage of Cordaites and Mesoxylon there are other difficulties as regards detached leaves which depart more or less widely from the typical Cordaitean form. Leaves such as C. circularis (fig. 468, B) and C. grandifolius emphasise the lack of any thoroughly satisfactory dividing line separating single pinnules of Cardio- fteris or Cyclofteris on the one hand and leaves of Psygmophyllum on the other from Cordaites. The petrified buds described as Dolerophyllum^ have been quoted by several authors as examples of unexpanded shoots of Cordaites though anatomical evidence warrants a generic separation. In the case of species founded on leaves described in this chapter as Cordaites it should be remem- bered that further research may necessitate an alteration in nomenclature. Among the species included in Cordaites is Noeggerathiopsis Hislopi^ (figs. 470 — 472), a type widely spread in India and in other parts of Gondwana-Land : if the change of generic name is accepted it involves the extension of the geographical range of Cordaites from Northern Europe and North America to the southern botanical province. We have as yet no proof of the existence of Cordaites in the Arctic regions. The range in time of Cordaites or of the Cordaitales has generally been stated to be from the Upper Devonian to the Permian. It is, however, by no means certain that the genus flourished before the Carboniferous period, though it is clear that closely allied types must have lived in 1 See page 270. ^ gee page 132. ^ gee page 2.38. XXXIII] PELOURDEA 277 pre-Carboniferous floras. The strata in New Brunswick from which Dawson recorded his supposed Devonian Cordaites have been shown to be Upper Carboniferous in age^. As regards the length of time during which the Cordaitales existed we have no decisive evidence. In recent years the tendency has been to extend their range into the Mesozoic era, and there are several pieces of evidence in favour of this. There is no doubt that considerations of age based on the arbitrary divisions of the geological scale sometimes insinuate themselves too thoroughly into questions connected with the duration of plant-types whether represented by famiUes or genera. We have been accustomed to regard Cordaites as a genus confined to the Palaeozoic period, a type which with many others carried on the tradition of Upper Carboniferous forests to the Permian floras and then made way for the precursors of Mesozoic types. There is, however, no valid reason for supposing that Cordaites and other Palaeozoic genera did not survive as less prominent members in succeeding floras. It must be admitted that evidence in support of Mesozoic Cordaitales is not above suspicion, though the probability is that Cordaites or some allied genera still flourished in the earlier stages of the Mesozoic era. The data on which this opinion is based cannot be fully discussed in a general treatise, but a few of the facts may be briefly considered. Zeiller^ and other authors have expressed the view that the Cordaitales were not exclusively Palaeozoic. In addition to Cordaites (Noeggerathiopsis) Hislopi recorded from Rhaetic floras, other possible representatives of the group are illustrated by specimens included in such genera as Yuccites, Bamhusium and Krammera. Pelourdea gen. nov. The name Yuccites^ was given to some detached, broad, linear leaves from the Bunter sandstone of the Vosges which were com- pared with the foliage of Yiccca and classed among Monocotyledons. The authors of the genus also described a cylindrical cast as a Yuccites stem, including both stem and leaves in Yuccites vogesiacus. 1 Slopes (14); Kidston (02) B. p. 363. « Zeiller (00^) B. p. 213. ^ Schimper and Mougeot (44) A. p. 42, PL xxi. 278 CORDAITEAE [CH. The supposed stem, as Fliche^ has shown, is a pith-cast and is appropriately named by him Endolepis vogesiacus. The Vosges leaves are assigned by this author to the genus Cordaites, a change of name which may eventually be justified though as yet based on insufficient evidence. There are objections to the institution of a new name in place of Yuccites, but it is undesirable to retain a designation suggesting false ideas with regard to affinity. A new name Pelourdea (after M. Pelourde of Paris, whose recent death deprives Palaeobotany of an able and promising investigator) is therefore proposed for leaves of the Yuccites type which in form, venation, and spiral phyllotaxis agree with those of Cor- daites but cannot confidently be assigned to that genus or even to the Cordaitales. For linear leaves, especially from Jurassic strata, resembling those of Phoenicopsis the name Desmiofhyllum^ is employed : these are very similar to those of Pelourdea ; they are characterised by their fairly uniform breadth and afford no indication of their arrangement on the supporting axis. Pelourdea vogesiaca (Schimper and Mougeot). The linear-lanceolate leaves described by Schimper and Mougeot as Yuccites vogesiacus and transferred by Fliche to Cordaites are probably specifically identical with specimens described by Mr Wills^ from Lower Keuper rocks in Worcester- shire. The English leaves were described by Arber* as Zamites grandis, — the name Zamites vogesiacus having been previously used by Schimper and Mougeot, — on the ground that the supposed leaves were probably pinnae of a cycadean frond, a view in agreement with an opinion previously expressed with regard to similar leaves from Stonesfield^. A later discovery by Wills of specimens, on which the drawing reproduced in fig. 484 is based, of the same type of leaf showing the foliar nature of the fossils necessitated the abandonment of the pinna-hypothesis, and the original name Yuccites vogesiacus was resuscitated^. The leaves reach a length of 50 cm. and a maximum breadth of 6-5 cm. ; the lamina is entire, lanceolate or Hnear-lanceolate, the apex 1 FKche (10) p. 218, PI. xx. fig. 2. 2 gee postea. 8 Wills, L. T. (10), p. 296, fig. 26. * Arber (07) Pis. xvii.— xix. 6 Seward (04) B. p. 111. « Arber (09^). XXXIIl] PELOIJRDEA 279 acuminate, and the lower part rather abruptly contracted and attached by a broad crescentic base; veins numerous, parallel, and occasionally forked. FHche records the occurrence of a small ^r^ma-like pith-cast and pieces of stem with leaf-scars (4x3 mm.) in association with leavQs of Pelourdea vogesiaca in Fig. 484. Pdourdea vogesiaca. Reconstruction of a foliage-shoot. (After Wills.) Triassic strata in Lorraine. An imperfectly preserved specimen described by FUche as Cordaianihus Minieri^ resembles an inflorescence of Cordaites. It consists of an axis 15 cm. long, the lower part forming a peduncle, and on the upper portion are linear bracts subtending oblong bodies which may be lateral fertile shoots. 1 Fliche (10) p. 264, PI. xxvii. fig. 2. 280 CORDAITEAE [CH. Pelourdea hadroclada (Halle). Dr Halle ^ recently published an account of some imperfect leaves and stem-fragments from the Rhaetic of Scania which he named Phyllotenia (?) hadroclada, the generic name provisionally adopted having been proposed by Salfeld^ for some rather obscure remains from the Corallian of Germany. It appears to have escaped the notice of both authors that Saporta^ in 1894 had adopted the designation Phyllotenia for some examples of broad parallel-veined leaves from Lower Cretaceous rocks in Portugal very similar to Velenovsky's Krammera mirabilis^. Some other generic name must therefore be used. For the Rhaetic species the name Pelourdea would seem appropriate. The type-specimen consists of an axis 10 — 12 mm. in diameter with spirally disposed transversely elongated leaf-scars bearing sessile linear leaves similar to Poa-Cordaites ; none of them are complete, the largest is 6 cm. long and 5 — 7 mm. broad with 8 — 12 parallel veins. An examination of the original specimens in the Stockholm Museum satisfied me that Dr Halle is justified in the opinion that they may be fragments of some Cordaitalean plant and that he was well advised to avoid the use of the name Cordaites. Salfeld's species, Phyllotenia longifolia, may be an imperfectly preserved example of Phoenicopsis^ , but the material is too in- complete to be identified with any degree of confidence. Pelourdea Imhofi (Heer). The Triassic leaves from Switzerland described by Heer^, and more recently by Leuthardt', as Bamhusium Imhofi, were referred by FHche^ to the genus Cordaites. The lamina is ensiform, 25 cm. long with a maximum breadth of 2-4 cm. Leuthardt's photograph of aerial stems and rhizomes of this supposed Mono- cotyledon are far from convincing. Pelourdea kewperiana (Compter). The leaves from the Lower Keuper of Thuringia assigned by Compter^ to Cordaites without adequate evidence resemble those 1 Halle (10). 2 Salfeld (09) B. p. 26. 8 Saporta (94) B. p. 216, PI. xxxvra. * Velenovsky (85) B. p. 1, Pis. i., iv. ^ See postea. • Heer (76) A. p. 86, PI. xxx. fig. 10. ' Leuthardt (03), p. 6, PL i. 8 FHche (10) p. 175, Pis. xvi., xvii. » Compter, G. (94), PL iv. fig. 9. XXXIII] PELOURDEA 281 of P. vogesiaca, but there is no evidence as to their manner of attachment; they are 30 — 4:0cm. long and from 1-5 to 2cm. broad. Pelourdea megaphylla (Phillips). This species was first described by Phillips^ from the Middle Jurassic Stonesfield Slate and afterwards referred to Zamites^: the leaves bear a striking resemblance to foliage of the type Cordaites borassifolius ; the lamina is 30 cm. long and attains a breadth of 3 cm., the apex is acuminate and sUghtly contracted towards the broad concave base. My former comparison of these Stonesfield leaves with the long pinnae of Ceratozamia mexicana seemed to be supported by Philhps's type-specimen of Palaeozamia longifolia. It may be that the supposed pinnae in Philhps's type are spirally disposed leaves : if this is the case the specimen may be a fragment of a Podozamites ; its specific identity with the larger detached specimens, though probable, cannot be demon- strated. Some leaves figured by Zigno^ from Jurassic rocks of Italy as Yuccites Schimperianus may be identical with P. mega- fhylla. Pelourdea mirahilis (Velenovsky ex Corda MS.). The generic name Krammera, suggested by Corda, was employed by Velenovsky* for large Cordaites-like leaves from the Lower Cretaceous of Bohemia, for casts of cones regarded by him as stems, and for fruit-hke bodies. The leaves, previously described as Flabellaria chamaeropifolia Goepp., Bammara alhens Presl, etc., bear a close resemblance to the large broadly linear leaves of Cordaites ; the lamina reaches a length of 40 cm. and between the veins occur 1 — 4 finer striations. The fossils identified by Velenovsky as stems bearing crowded imbricate scales, which he regarded as the persistent bases of Krammera leaves, are probably cones; they agree very closely in size and shape, also in the form of the scales, with cones of Agathis and some other recent Conifers. As the designation Krammera was instituted primarily for cones and not leaves the name Pelourdea is substi- tuted for it. 1 PhiUips (71) p. 169. 2 Seward (04) B. p. 110; Arber, E. A. N. (07) p. 117. ■2 Zigno (85), p. 7, PI. xxvi. ^ Velenovsky (85) B. Pis. i.— m. 282 CORDAITEAE [CH. Niponophyllum. Stopes and Fujii. Nifonophyllum cordaitiforme Stopes and Fujii. The generic name Niponophyllum^ was proposed for some petrified specimens of leaves or possibly leaflets from Upper Cretaceous beds in Japan which, though not definitely assigned to a group or family, are considered by the authors of the genus 'to lie [anatomically] somewhere between Cordaites and Cyca- deoidea' 'with a closer similarity to the former than to the latter if we compare the whole Cordaites leaf with our blade.' The data on which this conclusion is based are, however, insufiicient to justify a reference of Niponophyllum to the Cordaitales or indeed to lend any substantial support to the opinion that the Japanese specimens are anatomically more akin to Cordaites than to other plants. The type-species is represented by two specimens of leaf-fragments about 0-4 mm. thick and from 6 to 9 mm. broad containing from 21 to 33 vascular bundles; the upper part of the mesophyll is composed of palisade tissue and the stomata appear to be confined to the lower epidermis. Each bundle is accompanied by an I-shaped girder, and small patches of scleren- chyma occur next the upper epidermis between the girders; there are no resin-canals : the vascular bundles are collateral, the xylem is said to be almost entirely centripetal and exarch, but in the absence of evidence afforded by longitudinal sections the details of structure cannot be definitely determined. A com- parison is made with Cycadean leaves and with leaves of Arau- carineae and Podocarpeae, also with Cordaites \ another type with which Niponophyllum may be compared is Desmiophyllum Solmsi^. The genus is interesting as an example of a petrified gymno- spermous type of leaf characterised by the absence of resin-ducts and transfusion-tracheids, the possession of collateral, apparently exarch, bundles enclosed in a double sheath ; but the data supplied are insuj05cient to enable us to allocate the specimens to a position within the class. 1 Stopes and Fujii (10) p. 16, PI. iii. figs. 14—16. 2 See postea. XXXin] TITANOPHYLLUM 283 A specimen described by Scbenk^ as Eolirion frimigenium from Lower Cretaceous beds in the Carpathian mountains closely resembles in habit a foliage-shoot of Poa-Cordaites ; the leaves are narrow and linear with obtuse apices and attached, apparently, in a close spiral. Schenk assigns the plant to the Monocotyledons, but its systematic position must be left unsettled. The list of Mesozoic specimens resembling Cordaites leaves might be extended. Apart from some Triassic and Rhaetic examples which may well be Cordaitalean, there are many others which, though similar in form and venation to Cordaites, are in all probabiHty more closely related to Agaihis and other genera ; the species Dammarites Bayeri recently described by Zeiller^ from the Upper Cretaceous of Bulgaria is a case in point. The Araucarian character of the wood of Cordaites precludes any satisfactory discrimination between Mesozoic Araucarian stems and those of Cordaitalean species, at least in the case of such material as is usually available. Titanophyllum. Renault. Titanofhyllum Grand'Euryi Renault. The remarkable leaves on which this genus and species are founded^ were discovered in the Commentry coalfield; they occur as detached specimens and cannot be correlated with any known stem. Renault suggests that the Autun stems referred to Colpoxylon may have borne the Titanophyllum leaves, but this correlation rests only on the dimensions of the stems and the occurrence of transversely elongated scars on the surface. The lamina is thick and coriaceous, 70 — 75 cm. long and 20 — 25 cm. in breadth ; the veins are parallel but not branched ; numerous longitudinal striations on the upper surface indicate the presence of hypodermal stereome-strands ; stomata are abundant on the lower surface and the more or less rectangular cells in the neighbourhood of the stomata appear to be papillose (fig. 485, A, B). The distal region of the lamina 1 Schenk (71) p. 20, PI. vn. fig. 4. 2 ZeiUer (05^) p. 17, PI. vn. figs. 8—11. 3 Renault and Zeiller (90) A. p. 627, PI. lxix. figs. 1—4. 284 CORDAITEAE [CH. XXXIII is often torn into strips (fig. 485, A) ; the approximately rectangular leaf has a broad elliptical base 9 — 10 x 3 — 4 cm. Fig. 485. Titanophyllum Grand' Euryi. A, leaves -^ nat. size; B, stomata on the lower surface of the lamina. (After Renault and Zeiller.) Dr White^ describes a specimen from the Lower Coal Measures of Missouri as ? Titanophyllum Brittsii which he speaks of as the thick base of a leaf similar to that described by Renault but, as White says, no formal diagnosis is possible without more satis- factory material. Such evidence as is available suggests that Titanophyllum is a type of Cordaitalean leaf probably closely allied to Cordaites. 1 White (99) B. p. 271. CHAPTER XXXIV. CORDAITALES. C. PITYEAE. Pitys. Witham. This generic name in the form Pitus was first used by Witham^ for some petrified pieces of large stems from Lower Carboniferous strata in the south of Scotland (Berwickshire). In an earlier paper Witham^ gives an account of the beds on the banks of the Tweed from which the specimens of Pitys and other plants were obtained. The name was revived by Goeppert^ as a substitute for Pissadendron^ adopted by EndHcher and linger: Scott^ employed the older name in the account of his investigations, which have added greatly to our knowledge of Witham's types. The distinguishing characters of Pitys are: the Araucarian pitting of the secondary xylem, the large pith, the occurrence of numerous small primary xylem strands of mesarch structure in the peripheral region of the pith, and the simple nature of the leaf -traces. Nothing is known of the extra-stelar tissues, and beyond the fact that the species were arborescent we have no information with regard to the foliar^ or reproductive organs. Pitys antiqua Witham. In 1899 Scott "^ published a preliminary description of some sections in the possession of Dr Kidston from Lennel Braes (Berwickshire : Calciferous series) under the name Araucarioxylon antiquum, but in the more complete account the name Pitys^ is adopted. The following description is based on Scott's paper 1 Witham (33) A. pp. 37, 71. 2 Witham (30). 3 Goeppert (81) p. 403. * EndUcher (47) p. 297. 5 Scott (02) p. 346. « See footnote p. 288. ' Scott (992); Witham (33) A. Pis. m.— vm. xvi. 8 Scott (02), p. 346, Pis. I., II., v., vi. 286 PITYEAE [CH. and on the examination of the sections. Fig. 486 represents a diagrammatic sketch of a section (2-7 x 2-7 cm.) of the central region of a stem which had lost most of its secondary wood. In some cases the pith reaches a diameter of 3 cm. ; it consists of large parenchymatous cells broader than deep, several of which contain a black substance and are probably secretory elements: the intercellular spaces are fairly large. Horizontally extended gaps, due to shrinkage and collapse, occur in the pith and give to it an appearance not unlike that of Cordaites. Numerous small elliptical strandsof primary xylem,0-15—0-3mm. Fig. 486. Pitysantiqua. Central J- , xo. J • XT- • region of stem, showing in diameter, are scattered in the pen- . ^ \ a ' ^ primary xylem strands as pheral region (fig. 486) at varying black dots. (Kidston Col- distances from the inner edge of lection, 598 A.) the secondary wood and occasionally, when about to bend outwards as a leaf-trace, a primary xylem- strand abuts directly on the secondary xylem. The protoxylem occupies a more or less central position in each mesarch strand (fig. 487, B, fx) : the centrifugal tracheids have the Araucarian pitting while the centripetal elements are spiral. A few parenchy- matous cells are associated with the more central tracheids. A leaf -trace about to bend outwards into the zone of secondary wood is double, but at a slightly higher level in its course it assumes the form of a single strand. The foliar bundles are thus single and not true double traces. Scott recognised, at the extreme edge of the pith, an association with outgoing leaf-traces of a single reparatory strand deeper in the medullary tissue. In this species there is no evidence that an outgoing trace is accompanied by an arc of secondary xylem, but that such was the case is rendered highly probable by the discovery of an arc of wood added by the cambium to a leaf -trace in Pitys Withami^. The radial disposition of the pith-cells, many of which appear to be secretory, around each primary xylem-strand (fig. 487, B) is a characteristic feature. A difficult problem, namely the relation of primary xylem and 1 Scott (02) p. 355. xxxiv] PITYS 287 phloem, is raised by the fact that the primary strands are composed exclusively of xylem and are in most cases separated from the secondary wood by several parenchymatous cells. Scott favours the view that the primary phloem was originally at some distance from the primary xylem, the cambium being formed nearer to the phloem, an arrangement foreign to recent Gymnosperms. It is perhaps conceivable that the primary conducting strands included no true phloem. fet^ Fig. 487. Pitys antiqua. A, radial section of secondary xylem; B, transverse section showing the inner edge of the secondary wood and two primary-xylem strands with protoxylem, px. (Kidston Coll.) The secondary xylem consists of tracheids with 4 — 5 alternate rows of hexagonal pits on the radial walls (fig. 487, A) and not infrequently on the tangential faces. Near the ends of the tracheids the pits are occasionally more scattered and separate and may be reduced to a single row^, but on the whole the pitting is essentially Araucarian. The medullary rays are generally 4 cells in breadth, but may be 7 cells broad. In depth the rays extend to 70 cells. As seen in fig. 487, B, the inner ends of the rays are especially broad owing to the tangential dilatation of the cells. The innermost secondary tracheids are characterised by pitting intermediate between spiral and reticulate. There are no regular rings of growth in the wood. Pitys primaeva Witham. This species^, also founded on material from the Calciferous sandstone of Berwickshire, differs 1 Witham (33) A. PI. vm. fig. 2. 2 Ibid. p. 39, Pis. vm., XVI. ; Scott (02) p. 355, Pis. u., vi. 288 PITYEAE [CH. from P. antiqua in the broader and shorter form and greater breadth of the medullary rays (fig. 488, A, B), also in the larger tracheids and in the less crowded arrangement of the bordered pits in which the circular form sometimes replaces the hexagonal A B Fig. 488. Pitys primaeva. A, transverse section of the secondary xylem; B, tangential section of the secondary xylem. (From sections of the type- specimen in the Edinburgh University Botanical Department.) type. The structure of the pith is not known, but Scott was able to recognise in the partially preserved pith of a branch indica- tions of primary-xylem groups and other features pointing to a close resemblance to P. antiqua^. A piece of stem originally ^ Since this chapter was written Prof. W. T. Gordon has kindly supplied the following summary of his unpublished work on the genus Pitys. 'The re-examination of Pitys primaeva and P. antiqua in the light of the structure exhibited by numerous specimens of a new species recently discovered in Haddingtonshire has shown that all three types are similar as regards the structure of the primary wood. In each case the primary cylinder is comparable with that in Archaeopitys Eastmanii [see p. 290], i.e., there are medullary as well as circum-medullary xylem -strands. In certain specimens of the new species, Pitys Dayii, the bark and leaves are preserved and thus the details of leaf-trace emission from the stem have been determined. The leaves are short and stout and taper gradually to a point, quite distinct from the long, thin, spatulate Cordai- tean foliage. The internal structure of the leaf renders it easily distinguishable from the Cordaites type while it tends to accentuate the possible relationship of Pitys with the Lyginodendreae.' xxxiv] piTYS 289 described by Williamson^ as Lyginodendron (?) anomalum from the Lower Carboniferous volcanic ash of the Isle of Arran would appear to be closely related to, if not specifically identical with, P. frimaeva and, as Scott says, it should at least be included in the same genus. Pitys Withami (Lindley and Hutton). The Craiglieth Tree. 1831. Pinites Withami Lindley and Hutton, Foss. Flora, Vol. i. PI. ii. 1831. Pinites medullaris, Ibid. PL in. 1902. Pitys Withami Scott, Trans. R. Soc. Edinb. Vol. xl. p. 354, PI. ii. fig. 10: PI. VI. fig. 21. This species was founded on some sections cut from an incom- plete stem 36 feet long obtained in 1826 from the Calciferous sandstone of the Craigleith quarry near Edinburgh. The specimen named by Lindley and Hutton Pinites medullaris is no doubt specifically identical with the larger stem. In the same year (1831) Witham^ published an account of a still larger stem from the same locality, 47 ft long and 5 ft in diameter in the lower part, and in his book the name Pinites Withami is adopted. A large specimen of this tree is erected in the grounds of the Natural History Museum, London, and other specimens are preserved in the Edinburgh Botanic Garden. Goeppert in 1850 referred the species to Dadoxylon and later to Pitys^, while Brongniart* assigned it to his genus Palaeoxylon. Scott^ who examined Witham's sections placed it in Pitys. The pitting of the secondary tracheids is often multiseriate, but the medullary rays are narrower than in Pitys antiqua and P. primaeva, rarely exceeding 4 cells in breadth, though still of the manoxyhc type. Primary-xylem strands occur in the peripheral region of the pith agreeing closely with those of P. antiqua. There are no regular and continuous annual rings though as Witham stated there are concentric markings on the wood which superficially resemble true rings. The leaf -traces are single and in their passage through the cylinder of wood an arc of secondary tracheids is added to the primary elements. 1 WiUiamson (78) A. p. 352, PL xxv. figs. 90—92; WiUiamson and Scott (95> p. 770; Seward (972) p, gO. 2 Witham (31) A. 3 Goeppert (50) p. 251; (81). * Brongniart (49) A. 77. ^ gcott (02) p. 354. s. ni 1^ 290 PITYEAE [CH. Archaeopitys. Scott and Jeffrey. Archaeofitys Eastmanii Scott and Jeffrey. The genus Archaeo- fitys^ has recently been instituted for a specimen of a stem from the Lower Carboniferous rocks of Kentucky which differs from Pitys antiqua, the type with which it is most closely allied, in the position and behaviour of the primary vascular strands in the pith. The type-specimen is a piece of stem 2-7 cm. in diameter including a solid parenchymatous pith 5-5 mm. broad and a cylinder of secondary wood. The wood is similar to that of Cordaites; the tracheids have 2 — 3 rows of pits but for the most part the details of structure are not preserved; the medullary rays are both uniseriate and multiseriate and not very deep ; the structure is more Cordaitean than Cycadean. A characteristic feature is the occurrence of about 30 vascular bundles in the medullary region: these mesarch strands, with the protoxylem near the centre, are scattered through the pith and several lie on the outer edge in contact with the secondary xylem or are partially embedded in the xylem-cylinder. The examination of a series of sections demonstrated the fusion of perimedullary with medullary strands and the occasional union of the strands of both regions with one another. It appears that the perimedullary strands are the leaf- traces while the strands deeper in the pith are merely branches from the peripheral leaf-trace strands. In Pitys antiqua the medullary xylem strands are confined to the outer zone of the pith and constitute the leaf-traces: in Archaeopitys, on the other hand, the medullary strands are scat- tered through the pith and the leaf-traces are restricted to the circummedullary region in actual contact with the secondary xylem. In the Devonian genus Callixylon there are similar strands but they are confined to the edge of the pith and are usually in contact with the wood as are the circummedullary strands in Archaeopitys. The grouping of the secondary xylem of Callixylon into wedge-shaped masses at the inner edge of the cylinder is a characteristic feature; this feature is less definite in Archaeopitys and absent from Pitys. I Scott and Jeffrey (14) p. 345, PL xxxi. figs. 31—36; text-figs. 4, 5. XXXI V] CALLIXYLON 291 Callixylon. Zalessky. Callixylon Trifilievi Zalessky. This genus is represented by a single species^, originally referred to Dadoxylon, founded on material from Upper Devonian rocks in the Donetz basin, Eussia, and based solely on the anatomical characters of the secondary wood and central region of an arborescent stem. The wood is pycnoxylic and of the Araucarian type ; the inner portion of the xylem-cylinder is divided into groups, similar to the regular wedges in a Calamite stem, consisting of tracheids converging towards an obtuse apex occupied by a primary xylem strand, fig. 489, A, a, b. On the radial walls of the tracheids the bordered pits not infrequently form a single row of flattened ovals, but more usually there are two or sometimes three rows of alternate con- tiguous pits (fig. 489, B) : circular and separate pits also occur. As Zalessky states, the pits do not always occupy the whole radial face ; unpitted patches sometimes interrupt the continuity of the pitted areas^. Similar circular and more scattered pits are unusually abundant on the tangential walls. There are no complete rings of growth. The medullary rays are narrow and, except at their dilated inner ends, uniseriate; usually one or a few cells deep, they may reach a depth of 12 or more cells. The pits on the radial walls of the ray-cells are said to be 4 — 7 in the field. The pith consists of thin-walled flattened parenchyma frequently elongated in a radial direction. At the inner edge of the secondary xylem and generally in contact with it are several anastomosing strands of primary xylem, mesarch in structure but with the protoxylem nearer the inner edge. These bundles may be single (fig. 489, A, a) or double (fig. 489, A, b, and C) and closely resemble those of Pitys antiqua except in their closer relation to the secondary wood. The leaf-traces have not been described, but the occurrence of twin-bundles like those in fig. 489, C, suggests that they were double. The primary-xylem elements show particularly well transitional forms of pitting connecting the multiseriate and scalariform types. Callixylon, though conveniently and justly regarded as a distinct genus, exhibits in its primary xylem a fairly close agreement 1 Zalessky (09); (11) p. 29, PI. rv. 2 Zalessky (11) PI. iv. fig. 3. 19—2 292 PITYEAE [CH. with Pitys^. The above account is based in part on Zalessky's description and partly on specimens in Dr Kidston's possession. Miss Elkins and W. Wieland^ have recently described some Upper Devonian wood from Indiana characterised by a grouping B 0 Fig. 489. Callixylon Trifilievi. A, C, the inner margin of the secondary xylem showing strands of primary xylem, a, h, and C. B, tracheids of the secondary xylem. (A, C, from photographs suppHed by Prof. Zalessky; B, Cambridge Botany School.) of the circular or elliptical bordered pits in the radial walls of the tracheids similar to those in Callixylon Trifilievi which they include 1 Scott (12) p. 1024. 2 Elkins and Wieland (14). XXXIV] COENOXYLON 293 together with the Middle Devonian species Cordaites NewherryV- in Zalessky's genus. Though these two American species are comparable in the discontinuous arrangement of the tracheal pits with the Russian type the latter is characterised by the presence of primary xylem-strands, a feature that has not been recognised in the American stems: it would seem, then, undesirable to adopt the designation Callixylon in preference to Dadoxylon unless there is evidence as to similar characters in the primary region of the xylem. Coenoxylon. Zalessky. Coenoxylon Scotti Zalessky. Prof. Zalessky ^ gave the name Coenoxylon to a small and incomplete piece of stem of doubtful provenance but possibly from the Ural Permian beds. The pith, 2 cm. broad, consists of parenchyma associated in the central region with numerous large sclerous cells. In one section a sinuous band of meristematic tissue was observed near the periphery of the pith : the appearance of this tissue in a photo- graph given to me by Prof. Zalessky suggests comparison with occasional strips of similar dividing cells in the pith of Lyginopteris. The secondary wood is composed of tracheids with 1 — 2 rows of flattened or hexagonal pits on the radial walls and narrow uni- seriate medullary rays reaching a depth of 15 cells and with 2 — 7 oval pits in the field. As in the wood of Mesopitys Tchihatcheffi^ there are distinct and apparently complete rings of growth. It is on the ground of the arrangement and structure of the primary xylem that Zalessky instituted a new generic name. The primary xylem forms teeth of variable size which project into the pith from the edge of the secondary xylem : the promi- nent portions of the main mass of primary xylem give off branches, differing considerably in size and shape, some of which become separated by a comparatively broad band of parenchyma from the parent xylem-tissue. These bundles anastomose in their course through the pith and in doing so incorporate between them patches of parenchyma. The bundles of primary xylem are endarch. From the centrifugal strands at the periphery of the 1 PenhaUow (00) pp. 64, PI. xii. 2 Zalessky (112) p 13^ ggg i_^ 3 See page 295. 294 PITYEAE [CH. pith double leaf-traces are produced which pass almost horizon- tally through the secondary wood. As Zalessky points out, the leaf-traces in their dual nature and in the elongated and narrow form of the tracheal groups, as seen in tangential section of the secondary wood, bear a close resemblance to those of Ginkgo biloba. This Russian genus agrees in its double leaf-trace with Meso- xylon, Mesopitys, and Antarcticoxylon : among recent plants Ginkgo would seem to be the most closely allied type. Parapitys. Zalessky. The designation Parapitys^ has been proposed for a single Upper Carboniferous species characterised by the possession of secondary wood like that of Cordaites, double leaf-traces, and small mesarch primary xylem-strands. Nothing is known of the leaves or reproductive organs. Parapitys Spencer i (Scott). In 1880 Williamson^ published a short account of a transverse section of a specimen found by Mr J. Spencer in Upper Carboni- ferous strata near Halifax in Yorkshire which afforded evidence of the occurrence of double leaf -traces. The following description is taken from Scott's account^ of the species, which he named Dadoxylon Spenceri. The parenchymatous pith, 5 — 6 mm. in diameter, is obtusely pentagonal, the prominent angles corre- sponding to the points of exit of paired leaf-traces like those of Mesoxylon, Ginkgo, and other genera. The secondary xylem consists of narrow tracheids with crowded multiseriate pits on the radial walls and narrow medullary rays one-cell broad and 1 — 8 cells deep. In contact with the inner margin of the secondary wood are a few small mesarch strands of primary xylem, the protoxylem and some parenchyma occupying a more or less central position. A leaf-trace about to enter the secondary xylem is represented by twin-bundles which retain their double nature as they traverse the stele, but at a lower level the two com- ponents fuse and appear as single bundles at the outer edge of the pith. The division of a leaf-trace into two before passing 1 Zalessky (11) p. 28. 2 Williamson (80) A. p. 516, PI. xx. fig. 60. 3 Scott (02) p. 357, Pis. II., VI. XXXIV] MESOPITYS 295 out, as in Poroxylo7i, constitutes a difference from Lyginopteris in which the division occurs later. Zalessky's generic name Parapitys is an appropriate substitute for Dadoxylon in view of the presence of separate primary xylem strands, a feature foreign to typical Dadoxylons which agree with recent Conifers and Cycads in the absence of vascular strands distinct from the endarch centrifugal wood. As Scott^ says, Parapitys 'is best regarded as a near ally of Mesoxylon.' Mesopitys. Zalessky. Mesofiiys Tchihatcheffi (Goeppert). The genus Mesopitys was instituted by Zalessky for a Permian species founded by Goeppert^ on a piece of decorticated stem from the Kousnetzk basin in Siberia and afterwards more fully described by Goeppert and StenzeP. The structure of the secondary wood led Goeppert to adopt the name Araucarites for which Kraus* substituted Araucarioxylon. A recent investigation of additional material by Zalessky brought to light the existence of groups of primary xylem abutting on the secondary xylem and projecting into the pith, characterised by the occurrence of spiral protoxylem elements on the inner edge. The recognition of this important feature justified Zalessky in the adoption of a new generic term. In general anatomical characters Mesopitys agrees with Eristophyton Beinertianum (Goepp.) but is distinguished by the more feebly developed primary-xylem groups and by their endarch structure. The examination of sections from some of Prof. Zalessky's material lent to me by Dr Kidston enables me to confirm Zalessky's description, though I am not convinced that the primary xylem-strands are exclusively endarch: in most of the primary groups the protoxylem is clearly on the inner edge, but in a few cases there may be a small amount of centripetal xylem present. The characters of Mesopitys Tchihatcheffi may be summarised as follows: Annual rings well defined, varying considerably in breadth; the summer wood is represented by several rows of narrower 1 Scott (12) p. 1028. 2 Goeppert (452) p. 11, Pis. xxix. — xxxv. ; Zalessky (11). 3 Goeppert and Stenzel (88) p. 33, Pis. v., vi. * Kraus in Schimper (72) A. p. 381. 296 PITYEAE [CH. tracheids (fig. 490, A). In the piece of stem shown in the figure the breadth of the wood from the flattened and crushed pith to the broken outer edge is 6 cm. The medullary rays are numerous, uniseriate, rarely 2 cells in breadth; the pits on the radial walls of the ray-cells, 7 — 10 in the field, are apparently simple, oval, and oblique : the rays are generally 3 — 4 cells in depth but may be deeper. There are 1 — 3 rows of hexagonal alternate rows of pits on the radial walls of the tracheids. The primary xylem consists of groups, varpng in size and sometimes reduced to a very few elements, in contact with the secondary xylem, usually though probably not invariably endarch. In the two narrow radially elongated and partially destroyed primary strands shown in fig. 490, B, the protoxylem, fx, is on the inner edge. The leaf -trace passes through the secondary wood as a single strand. Fig. 490. Mesopitys Tchihatcheffi. A, transvt'isc section showing rings of growth in the wood. B, primary xylem with protoxylem, px, and the edge of the secondary xylem, x^. (Kidston collection, 2156.) In the section reproduced in fig. 490, A, the crushed and flattened pith measures 9 by 2 mm. ; it consists of thin-walled parenchyma with a few scattered thicker- walled cells. Nothing is known as to the structure of the cortical tissue or leaves. Antarcticoxylon. Seward. Antarcticoxylon Priestleyi Seward. The specimen on which this genus was founded was discovered by Mr Raymond Priestley^ in a boulder, probably derived from the Upper Beacon sandstone, 1 Seward (14) p. 17, Pis. iv. — ^vni: XXXIV] ANTARCTICOXYLON 297 on the Priestley Glacier south of 74° S. lat. in the course of the journey of the Northern Party of Capt. Scott's second Antarctic Expedition. The type-specimen is a piece of silicified stem 1 ft long and 3 ins. in diameter ; there were no tissues preserved external to the secondary wood and it is impossible to say what proportion of the original thickness is represented. Annual rings are clearly marked at least macroscopically (fig. 491, C) though there is very little difference between the spring and summer tracheids : the centre of the compressed stem is occupied by a lighter coloured elliptical area 7x2 mm. which superficially resembles a pith, but in the peripheral region it consists of portions of a cylinder of spiral and scalariform tracheids, the actual pith being not more than 2^3 mm. in breadth. The pith consists of lacunar parenchyma separated by horizontal bands of dark cells containing some secreted substance (fig. 491, F) : the preservation is, however, not sufficiently good to enable one to describe it in detail. The secondary xylem is of the pycnoxyHc type ; the tracheids have either a single row of contiguous and partially flattened pits on their radial walls or a double row of alternate polygonal pits ; the medullary rays are nearly always uniseriate (fig. 491, E) and from 1 to 24 cells in depth. At the inner edge of the secondary wood there was a fairly broad zone of more delicate tracheids (fig. 491, A, x) characterised by spiral or scalariform bands and by their relatively small diameter. This innermost zone, which supplies the leaf-traces, is spoken of as the primary xylem; it appears to be endarch though this cannot be definitely determined. A characteristic feature of the primary xylem in the perimedullary region, as also in the leaf -traces on their way through the secondary wood, is the presence of short and broad tracheids (fig. 491, D, t) with reticulate thickening bands : these short elements may represent centripetal xylem and are similar to the short tracheids described by Scott^ in the sheath of Mesoxylon Lomaxi and to the larger elements in the stem of Megaloxylon^. An interesting feature seen in transverse sections of the secondary wood is the occurrence of light bands concentric with the rings of growth which are broadest near the long axis of the stem (fig. 491, C). In their narrower parts these bands are clearly 1 Scott (12). 2 See page 175. 298 PITYEAE [CH, Fig. 491. A — F, Antarcticoxylon Priestleyi. A, B, transverse sections of the xylem; a, small tracheids simulating protoxylem; x, xylem at the edge of the pith. C, transverse section showing leaf-traces, I, a, b. D, leaf-trace with short tracheids, t, in the pith; s, sclerous cells. E, tangential section. F, pith in longitudinal section. G, Pityosporites antarcticus; see Vol. iv. (AH the sections are in the British Museum.) XXXIV] ANTARCTICOXYLON 299 due to the partial destruction of the secondary tracheids, but in other places crushed parenchymatous tissue occurs which may be a traumatic phenomenon or possibly comparable with Nord- linger's 'medullary spots i' formed by local hypertrophy of medullary tissue. Although the structure of the leaf -traces cannot be definitely determined, it would seem that each trace passed into the perimedullary region as a single bundle of relatively large size composed of spiral and scalariform tracheids narrower than the secondary elements. The traces during their outward course were accompanied by some parenchymatous tissue con- tinuous with that in the pith, and the inner spiral tracheids of the trace were connected with isodiametric reticulate elements. The dimensions of the leaf-traces point to leaves of fairly large size. In the structure of the secondary wood Antarcticoxylon agrees on the whole with an Araucarian stem : the broad zone of xylem composed of spiral and scalariform tracheids at the edge of the pith is a feature common to Mesoxylon, Cordaites, and Araucaria. There is no evidence of the occurrence of double leaf-traces such as characterise certain Cordaitalean genera and some existing members of the Araucarineae. In the single nature of the leaf- traces the Antarctic stem resembles Mesopitys Tchihatcheffi also in the presence of rings of growth^, but in Antarcticoxylon the preservation of the primary xylem is too imperfect to admit of any satisfactory comparison as regards this important tissue with other types. The precise age of the Beacon sandstone has not been deter- mined, but the probability is that the upper beds from which the boulder containing Antarcticoxylon was derived are not older than the Rhaetic period. The chief interest of this imperfectly pre- served stem with undoubted Araucarian affinities is its occurrence in the rocks of Antarctica in association with other remains of comparatively large stems. 1 De Bary (84) A. p. 492; Grossenbacher (15). 2 See Scott, Nature, August 26, 1915. CHAPTER XXXV. PALAEOZOIC GYMNOSPERMOUS SEEDS. Seeds are abundantly represented as fossils from Carboni- ferous to Post-Tertiary deposits. The importance of fossil and sub-fossil species in the later geological series has been demon- strated by the investigations of Mr and Mrs Clement Reid and a few other workers in this neglected field. In cases where it is possible to assign seeds to their parent-plants the descriptions of casts, impressions, or petrifactions are added to the account of vegetative organs; but it frequently happens that seeds are preserved only as detached specimens many of which have little or no value as botanical records, while others that afford striking examples of the possibilities of petrifaction as a means of preserving the most delicate structures, are of great importance. In Volume II. an account was given of such Palaeozoic seed-bearing organs as Lepidocarpon and Miadesmia, and the genera Lagenostoma, Sphaerostoma, and Trigonocarpus are dealt with in this volume under Lyginopteris, Heterangium, and Medullosa. Certain seeds afford some evidence as to the systematic position of the parent- plants though insufficient to warrant more than a surmise as to the nature of the vegetative organs: in several cases it is only from the resemblance of detached seeds to types that on the strength of more or less convincing evidence are referred to definite parent-plants that any conclusions can be drawn with regard to precise systematic position. In view of the occurrence of several different types of seeds that retain their morphological features, but cannot be assigned with any degree of certainty to genera founded on vegetative organs, a special chapter is devoted to a comparative study of selected examples with the object of OH. XXXVj PALAEOZOIC SEEDS 301 directing attention to data bearing on evolutionary problems. Tbe chief interest of Palaeozoic seeds to the botanist lies in the facts they contribute towards the elucidation of questions con- nected with the promotion of the megasporangium and megaspore of the Pteridophyta to the higher stage represented by the integu- mented megasporangium (nucellus) and single megaspore that in the main fulfil the definition of a seed^. 'With the evolution of the seed,' as Oliver says, 'the plant rose at a bound to a higher plane, and this structure in its perfected form has become the very centre of the plant's existence^.' We can as yet form a very partial conception of the successive stages in the adoption of the seed-habit, but since 1855, the year in which Hooker and Binney^ published their paper on the structure of Trigonocarpus, ample proof has been furnished of the importance of Palaeozoic seeds from the standpoint of affinity between recent Gymnosperms and extinct seed-bearing plants, and of the modus operandi of evolutionary tendencies. A cursory examination of Palaeozoic seeds suffices to demonstrate their resemblance to those of recent Cycads and the seed of Ginkgo biloba ; but while it is clearly with these Gymnosperms that the majority of the seeds described in the following pages are most closely alUed, the extinct types possess many distinguishing features that throw light on some at least of the factors concerned in the production of the modern type. In many of the Palaeozoic seeds the nucellus stands free within the integument, to which it is attached only in the chalazal region, in contrast to the lateral union between integument and nucellus in the ovules of recent Cycads. It has been suggested by Oliver* that the seed of the Conifer Torreya affords a clue to the interpretation of this difference and that the lower part of the seed in Cycads and Torreya represents a later intercalation in the basal portion of the ovule, the ancient type having a free nucellus in contrast to the nucellus of modern seeds which is free only at the apex. It has been objected^ that there are no adequate grounds for assuming the addition of an intercalated zone or of the elongation of the ovule that this implies, the more probable 1 See Vol. n. p. 56. 2 QUver (06) p. 726. 3 Hooker and Binney (55). -» Oliver (03). s Worsdell (05) p. 58; SaUsbury (14) p. 67. 302 GYMNOSPERMOUS SEEDS [CH. view being that the lateral union of nucellus and integument represents congenital fusion in the ancestral type, a fusion com- parable with that of the coherent petals of a gamopetalous corolla. In the presence of a pollen-chamber most of the Palaeozoic seeds agree with those of recent Cycads, but in the extinct forms it is usually a more highly developed structure. The name pollen- chamber was given by Brongniart^ to the pollen-containing cavity in the free region of the nucellus in the petrified seeds from St Etienne in ignorance of the use of the same term by Griffith ^ in a posthumous work published in 1852 for the nucellar chamber in Cycas^. The genus Stephanospermum (fig. 494, A) illustrates the means by which the pollen-chamber was liberally supplied with water and thus adapted to the requirements of fertilisation by motile gametes. The pollen-chamber and its vascular supply paved the way for siphonogamy, that is the development of a pollen-tube for the more direct transmission of the male sperms. The highly developed mantle of tracheal tissue at the periphery of the nucellus in Stefhanospermum, represented on a reduced scale by the separate vascular strands of other seeds, may be compared with the tracheal investment to the nucellus in the recent Dicotyledonous genus Cassytha^. The presence of a nucellar vascular system in several Palaeozoic seeds is a feature in which they differ from those of recent Cycads with the exception of Bowenia. The retreat of the vascular supply from the imme- diate neighbourhood of the pollen-chamber in recent Cycads may, as Oliver points out, be correlated with the evolution of the pollen- tube — the substitution of siphonogamy for zoidiogamy. The diagram reproduced in fig. 492 represents a synthetic type based on such seeds as Stephanospermum and Cardiocarpus which illustrate an arrangement of conducting tissue frequently found in Palaeozoic seeds: the main strand gives off a pair of bundles in the sarcotesta in the principal plane, as in Cardiocarpus^ ; from the tracheal mass in the chalazal region numerous bundles pass up the nucellus as far as the floor of the pollen-chamber. The 1 Brongniart (81) p. 31. 2 For an account of the work of this author see Lang in OHver (13) p. 178. 3 See Scott (09) B. p. 543. « Mirande (05). 5 For definition of Cardiocarpus, see page 338. XXXV PALAEOZOIC SEEDS 303 nature of the vascular supply in this generalised type and in indi- vidual genera should be compared with that in the seeds of recent Cycads^ described in Chapter xxviii. Recent research has revealed the not unexpected fact that in such Upper Carboniferous petrified seeds as have been investigated — a small proportion of the large number produced in the Palaeozoic forests — there was a remarkable range in the mechanism connected with pollination and the matura- tion of the microspores. A com- parison of the genera Physostoma, Lagenostojna, Conostoma, Trigo- nocarpus, Stephanospermum and others reveals the occurrence of very different though not unrelated structural features especially in the I • X J.T- J rpr Fig. 492, 'A conjectural synthetic apical region oi the seed. Ihese ^ t ^ u ^ ■ ..u u 4. ^ '^ type of seed embodymg the characters seeds, including Physostoma pro- of such a seed as Stephanospermum bably the most archaic type, with those of a Cardiocarpus' ; represent a stage in evolution I'lf.erjhver.) ""'' P^^^^"^^^"^^^^' already far removed from the starting-point: the diversity of plan recalls the variety in the form of the chloroplasts in the Green Algae, and in both cases we are in touch with an experimental phase representing a tentative advance towards greater efficiency. In its differentiation into an outer fleshy region, the sarcotesta, a stony layer, the sclerotesta, and in many cases an inner flesh, the Palaeozoic seeds resemble recent Cycads : in both extinct and modern seeds the balance of evidence would seem to be in favour of attributing a single rather than a double origin to the integument. Among the numerous types of Palaeozoic seeds are several which invite comparison with the fruits or carpels, apart from the seeds, of Angiosperms. Impressions of Samaropsis seeds (figs. 502, B — K; 503; 504) bear a close resemblance to the laterally expanded fruits of the common Crucif er Thlaspi arvense ; the ribbed testa of Hexagonocarpus (fig. 506, H) and other genera 1 See page 95. 304 GYMNOSPERMOFS SEEDS [CH. recalls the fruit- wall of Alstroemeria ; the recently described Lower Carboniferous seed Thysanotesta sagittula Nath. (fig. 506, F) simulates a carpel of Erodium. These and similar instances of a close parallehsm in external features between organs that are not homologous, though in themselves of no morphological significance, are at least interesting as illustrating the plasticity displayed by reproductive structures, which in the Palaeozoic period marked a morphological achievement comparable in its importance with the still greater achievement represented by the highly speciahsed fruits of the modern Flowering plants. The range in form and surface-features of Angiospermous fruits was foreshadowed by Palaeozoic seeds. Structural types and in some cases, superadded to these, features which may reasonably be supposed to have facilitated dispersal had been acquired by the seeds of Palaeozoic plants in forms that in a much later period were adopted by fruits even to a greater degree than by seeds. Characters useful in seed-dispersal, that are now shared by fruits and seeds, are illustrated by the fleshy and possibly edible seeds of extinct Gymnosperms, the plumes and hairy beak of Gnetopsis (fig. 494, E) and Thysanotesta (fig. 506, F) suggestive of feathery stigmas and other appendages. The lacunar sarcotesta of Aetheo- testa, the thick endotesta of Pachy testa (fig. 497), and the air- chamber of Codonospermum (fig. 498), are strictly comparable with aids to buoyancy in fruits of existing Flowering plants. The mucilage-hairs and superficial cells in Physostoma (fig. 494, 1) and Stephanospermum may be compared with the thick mucilaginous investment of the megaspores of recent water-ferns and with similar tissues of some Angiospermous seeds. The bionomics of Palaeozoic plants is a subject worthy of more serious attention than it has so far received. The search for morphological characters that may have facihtated the wanderings of widely distributed genera and species and a closer investigation of physiological-anatomical problems presented by the vegetative organs of petrified plants would not only extend our knowledge of the morphology of ancient types but would stimulate comparative study and, incidentally, reUeve the dullness of pure description. It may be argued that we should first estabhsh a more sohd foundation by further observations on XXXV] PRESERVATION OF SEEDS 306 living plants; but even at the risk of allowing speculation too free a hand the attempt is worth making, and it may be urged that, as in phylogenetic enquiries so in other branches of botany, facts obtained from plants of other ages may serve to supply deficiencies in knowledge based only on existing forms. One of the diflB.culties inseparable from the study of fossil plants, namely the identification of impressions and casts with specimens ex- hibiting anatomical characters, is particularly well illustrated by seeds. The description of a genus based on mere external form may sometimes be extended without great risk of error to include species founded on anatomical characters, but on the other hand, there are many instances in which — despite a general resemblance in form and size between petrifactions and impres- sions— lack of evidence of generic identity requires the employment of distinctive names. The determination of impressions is, as Lesquereuxr recognised, 'subject to a great deal of uncertainty,' and many of the genera founded on external features are purely artificial and include species that have no essential features in common. Moreover in the case of petrified specimens the apparent absence of an external fleshy layer is often due to destruction before preservation : as Solms-Laubach^ points out, it is obviously impossible to be certain as to the number of integumental layers in seeds that are not well preserved in all their parts. Goeppert founded a new genus, Acanthocarpus, on a Permian seed described as A. xanthioides^, because of the occurrence of spinous processes attached to an obcordate kernel: these apparent spines are in all probability the remains of a very imperfectly preserved sarco- testa. The preservation of the central portion of a seed, that is the seed-cavity with the enclosing shell, conveniently called the nucule, has often led to an unnecessary multipHcation of generic terms. Other examples of confusion resulting from different states of preservation are quoted in the accounts of some of the selected types. Williamson in 1877 pointed out that we learn from the large number of different kinds of Palaeozoic seeds that 'there were in the Carboniferous forests many gymnospermous stems clothed 1 Solms-Laubach (91) A. p. 118. 2 Goeppert (65) p. 177, PI. xxvi. figs. 27, 28. s. in 20 306 GYMNOSPERMOUS SEEDS [CH. with foliage of which we have not yet discovered any traces, probably because these Gymnosperms did not flourish upon the low swampy grounds which were the homes of the great mass of the coal-producing plants^.' Prof. Zeiller^ has also drawn attention to the numerical excess of seeds over vegetative organs. This discrepancy has to a large extent been explained by the discovery that many of the supposed Ferns were seed-bearing plants, and a further explanation is suggested by the superiority of seeds over stems and leaves in their adaptation to dispersal by water. In 1874 Brongniart^ described several petrified seeds from material discovered by Grand'Eury in the St Etienne coal-field, and seven years later his descriptions were republished*, with the addition of several beautifully executed drawings, as a posthumous volume edited by his distinguished pupil Renault. Wilhamson's researches suppHed much additional information, and in recent years the more detailed study of French and Enghsh seeds by Bertrand and particularly by Oliver and his pupils has further emphasised the interest and importance of this field of work. Brongniart proposed a two-fold classification of French seeds: (i) bilaterally symmetrical seeds, more or less flattened in section, which he beheved to be Cordaitean; (ii) radially symmetrical seeds, circular in transverse section : the latter group he considered to be less closely allied to recent types. The employment of the terms Platyspermeae and Radiospermeae, proposed by Oliver^ for Brongniart's divisions, serves a useful purpose if due regard is paid to the adequacy of the evidence as to symmetry and if it is recognised that this classification cannot be rigidly employed in all cases. It was pointed out by Brongniart that the occasional occurrence of tricarinate seeds of Ginkgo (fig. 631) and Taxus is an exception to the general rule of bilateral symmetry: seeds of Cycas are normally bilateral, but radially symmetrical forms also occur^. The genus Conostoma (fig. 494, B) represents an intermediate type which, though almost radially symmetrical, exhibits a shght tendency towards platyspermy. Evidence 1 Williamson (77) B. p. 262. 2 ZeiUer (88) A. p. 642. ' Brongniart (74). ^ Brongniart (81). « Oliver (04) B. p. 389. ^ Affourtit and La Riviere (15). XXXV] CLASSIFICATION OF SEEDS 307 recently brought forward by Nathorst^ renders probable a con- nexion of a presumably radiospermic seed Lagenospermum Arheri^ with the Lower Carboniferous fronds Adiantites hellidulus Heer, and this furnishes an interesting illustration of the association of both platyspermic and radiospermic seeds with the same generic type of fohage. While retaining Radiosperm and Platysperm as convenient descriptive terms, I have not adopted them as group- designations on the ground that they do not in themselves serve as trustworthy criteria of relationship. Attention is called by Sahsbury^ to the occurrence of bilaterally and radially symmetrical fruits among British Carices and to a similar mixture in the family Polygonaceae. The acquisition of more detailed and accurate knowledge of Palaeozoic seeds led to an extension of the two-fold division of Brongniart and Ohver which is based on such characters as the position of the vascular tissue in relation to the integument and nucellus, the form of the pollen-chamber, and other features. The division Lagenostomales has been instituted for Lagenostoma and some other E-adiosperms connected by certain important characters : these seeds may be referred to the Pteridospermeae though it is only in the case of Lagenostoma, and to a less extent Sfhaerostoma, that a correlation between vegetative organs and seeds has been rendered sufficiently probable to justify an assump- tion of generic identity. The name Trigonocarpeae* has recently been used for a section of Radiosperms represented by Trigono- carpus, Stephanospermum, and other genera. Although the genus Stephanospermum, as Ohver^ says, may be regarded as the type- genus of a group of seeds, it is more fitting, as the same author^ insists, to adopt a divisional term based on the generic name of the much more widely spread and more famihar Trigono- carpus. For the sake of uniformity in nomenclature it is proposed to adopt the name Trigonocarpales instead of Trigonocarpeae to rank with Lagenostomales. The Platyspermeae comprise such seeds as Cardiocarpus, Mitrospermum, and Rhahdospermum, genera characterised by 1 Nathorst (14) p. 32. * See page 173. 3 SaUsbury (14) p. 71. * SaHsbury (14). 5 Oliver (04) B. p. 392. • OHver (07). 20—2 308 LAGENOSTOMALES [CH. well-marked anatomical features and probably Cordaitean; it has, however, been shown that typical Platysperms were also borne on leaves of Pteridosperms and, as Mrs Arber^ says, the notion that every member of the Platyspermeae was necessarily a Cordaitean seed has been discredited by the discovery of the seeds of Aneimites (Wardia) and Pecopteris PliicJceneti'^. For general purposes it is hardly necessary to adopt the subdivisions of the Lagenostomales used by Ohver and Sahsbury^, though as facts accumulate we shall no doubt be able to make further advances towards a natural system of classification. The following three divisions of Permo-Carboniferous seeds include genera founded on petrified specimens and thus afford valuable morpho- logical data. The groups Lagenostomales and Trigonocarpales include types belonging to closely related plants, a relationship clearly expressed in the seed-characters. I. Lagenostomales. The seeds included in this group are for the most part Radio- sperms, but in its slightly developed bilateral symmetry Conostoma ohlongum is a type transitional between Radiosperms and Platy- sperms. The testa may be ribbed and the ribs vary in number. The nucellus (megasporangium) is united to the integument not only at the base but laterally as far as the shoulder of the seed up to a level corresponding to the base of the pollen-chamber (lageno- stome) as in all recent Cycads and in the majority of Conifers. The seeds proper apart from the cupule are supplied with a single set of vascular bundles ; there is no vascular tissue in the nucellus, a feature no doubt correlated with the fusion of nucellus and integument*. The free portion of the integument is more or less deeply lobed or, in Lagenostoma, it forms a pyramidal canopy of fused lobes enclosing the lagenostome. The presence of a tapetal zone surrounding the megaspore is believed to be a feature characteristic of the group^. The testa, wholly or partially ribbed, is relatively thinner than in the Trigonocarpales and Cardiocarpales, and in its differentiation agrees less closely with the testa of recent Cycadean seeds. In Lagenostoma and possibly 1 Arber, A. (10) p. 505. 2 gge Chapter xxxi. 3 Oliver and Salisbury (11). * Salisbury (14) p. 67. 5 Oliver (09), p. 99. XXXV] PHYSOSTOMA 309 in other genera a loose sheath or cupule surrounded the ovule, while in Gnetopsis a similar envelope enclosed two to four seeds. The microspores are multicellular and smaller than those of Trigonocarpales, the average dimensions {Conostoma, Physostoma, Lagenostoma) being 67/x x 52jLt. Genera. Physostoma ; Conostoma ; Sphaerostoma ; Lageno- stoma ; Gnetopsis. Lagenostoma may safely be referred to Lyginopteris , and Sphaerostoma with but httle risk of error to Heterangium: the parent-plants of the other genera are unknown, but all may be regarded as the seeds of Pteridosperms and probably of genera more nearly alHed to the Lyginopterideae than to the Medulloseae. The genus Lagenospermum, recently instituted by Nathorst^, is dealt with in Chapter xxxi. Physostoma. Williamson. Physostoma elegans Wilhamson. The generic name Physostoma"^ was appUed by Wilhamson^ to a seed from the Lower Coal Measures of Lancashire which he named P. elegans \ he afterwards described it as Lageno- stoma physoides, but the original name has been revived by Oliver* to whom our knowledge of this type is chiefly due. The specimens figured by Wilhamson^ as Sporocarpon ornatum also belong to Physostoma elegans. The seeds are circular in section, approximately 6 mm. long with a maximum diameter of 2 mm. The testa has about 10 longitudinal ribs passing in the apical region into a ring of free lobes or tentacles surrounding and considerably overtopping the nucellar apex: these tentacles take the place of a micropylar tube (fig. 494, I ; fig. 493, D) and are a feature 'in which this seed differs from all other known seeds, fossil or recent^.' A single vascular strand passes through the chalazal region and divides into 10 bundles, one to each 1 Natharst (14) p. 29. 2 0vo-du), to blow; ^u