The Plesitocene plant remains of the coastal plain of Eastern North America

Authors

  • E. Willard Berry Department of Geology, Duke University. Durham, North Carolina

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54991/jop.1952.376

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References

BERRY, EDWARD W. (1906). Pleistocene Plants from Virginia. Torreya. 6: 88-90.

Idem (1907). A Tilia from the New Jersey Pleistocene. Torreya. 7:80-81.

Idem (1907). Contribution to the Pleistocene Flora of North Carolina. Jour. Geol. 15: 338-349.

Idem (1907). Pleistocene Plants from Alabama. Am. Naturalist. 41:389-700.

Idem (1909). Additions to the Pleistocene Flora of North Carolina. Torreya. 9: 71-73.

Idem (1909). Juglandaceae from the Pleistocene of Maryland. Torreya. 9: 96-99.

Idem (1909). Pleistocene Swamp Deposits in Virginia. Am. Naturalist. 43: 432-436.

Idem (1910). Additions to the Pleistocene Flora of New Jersey. Torreya. 10: 261-267.

Idem (1910). Additions to the Pleistocene Flora of Alabama. Am. Jour. Sci. 29: 387-398.

Idem (1911). Notes on the Ancestry of the Bald Cypress. Plant world. 14: 39-45.

Idem (1914). Additions to the Pleistocene Flora of Southern States. Torreya. 14: 159-162.

Idem (1915). The Mississippi River Bluffs at Columbus and Hickman, Kentucky and their Fossil Flora. Prof. U.S. Nat. Museum. 48: 293-303.

Idem (1915). Pleistocene Plants from Indian Head Maryland. Torreya. 15: 205-208.

Idem (1917). The Fossil Plants from Vero, Florida. Jour. Geol. 25: 661-666.

Idem (1917). The Fossil Plants from Vero, Florida. Florida State Geol. Survey 9th Ann. Rept.: 19-33.

Idem (1919). Pleistocene Plants from Tennessee and Mississippi. Torreya. 19: 8-10.

Idem(1922). Additional Occurrence of Pleistocene plants. (Alabama and Tennessee). Torreya. 22: 10, 11.

Idem (1924). Organic Remains, Other than Diatoms, from the Excavation at the Walker Hotel Site, Washington D.C. Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 14:12-25.

Idem [1925 (1926)]. Pleistocene Plants from North Carolina. U.S. Geol. Survey. Prof. Paper. 140: 97-117.

Idem (1927). New Plant Records from the Pleistocene. Torreya. 27:21-27.

Idem (1933). New Occurrences of the Pleistocene Plants in the District of Columbia. Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 23: 1-25.

Idem (1934). Three additions to the Pleistocene Flora of Tennessee. Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 24:482-483.

Idem (1938). Pleistocene Fossils from Westmorland Country, Virginia. Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 28: 58-61.

BERRY, E. WILLARD (1948). Abst. Seeds from the Santee Dam site, South Carolina. Prog. 1948 Ann. Meet. Geol. Soc. Am. 16.

Idem (1949). Abst. Fossil Plants from Santee Valley, South Carolina. Prog. 1949 Ann. Meet. Geol. Soc. Am. 18.

BROWN, R. W. (1935). Fossil Plants from North-West Branch, Anacostia River, Washington D.C. Jour. Wash. Acad. Sci. 25:443.

HOLMES J.A. (1885). Taxodium (Cypress) in North Carolina, Quaternary, Jour. Elisha Mitchel Soc. 1884-85: 92, 93.

HOLLICK, A. (1892). Paleobotany of the Yellow Gravel, at Bridgeton, N.J. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club. 19: 330-333.

Idem (1906). Pleistocene of Maryland. Md. Geol. Surv.: 217-238.

Idem (1926). Report on a Tree Trunk and associated LigniticDevres Excavated in Manhattan Island. Am. Museum Novitates. 213: 1-7.

LESQUEREUX, L. (1859). On Some Fossil Plants of recent Formations. 27: 356-366.

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Published

1952-12-31

How to Cite

Berry, E. W. (1952). The Plesitocene plant remains of the coastal plain of Eastern North America. Journal of Palaeosciences, 1, 79–98. https://doi.org/10.54991/jop.1952.376

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Short Articles