Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
Jellinite Birdseye (Smrville) like limestone with fine
(whole) other 2 1/2 miles long.
Distelusa, suggest the Devon form. The latter species here and
several fragments. A whole Encimurus fan out for, a
small tail. Head of Halmanita. Tail of Ceraurus
Tail of Lemostus (suggest Tretiform). A very small
new form of Orthomerus of the filicites section, Ortomia
suggests mine. A coarse fenestrole Phyllophrine. The
Oklahoma occurrence was not from me.
The Jackfork plant an fm Beach Creek, Section:
22 T 1 N, R. 26 E. Oklahoma. Collected by Hoeman
dec. 1917. Number of IA 469. It is a soft dirty
dark (almost chreslite) sandstone with an abundance
of comminuted plant fragments. I saw no large plants and
as I could identify. No Lepidodendron, Calamites and
ferns are present. Did know not take the time to go
on the hundreds of small fragments. Fructs and leaves
I think like Cardioleapras are the most common. The ferns are
bendingly sparse and suffer Anemitts or rather Anckerptuni venation.
Badenwellia from the Permian of Brady County
with traces of amphibians and reptiles. Inger has the
locality. One of the trees as seen in photos looks human-port
dlike, but in more putative amphibians. See the 3 photos there.
Collected by Wallace C. Thompson, a senior at Osk,
University.