. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Natural history -- New York (State); Natural history. 136. Fig. 19. Trackypora limbata. Branch nat- ural size, and a portion enlarged to show the calices (after Hall j. TRACHYPORA LI M I! ATA . I Eaton.) ( Fig. 19.) (111. Dev. Fobs., PI. XXXIII. Striatopora limbata.) Distinguishing ('h a ra c - ters.—11 atlier irregularly disposed oval calices: mod- erately strong peristomes, with radiating ridges run- ning out upon the thickened walls; corallites abruptly bent outwards. Found on the " ... south Shore of Lake Erie, near Eighteen Mile


. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Natural history -- New York (State); Natural history. 136. Fig. 19. Trackypora limbata. Branch nat- ural size, and a portion enlarged to show the calices (after Hall j. TRACHYPORA LI M I! ATA . I Eaton.) ( Fig. 19.) (111. Dev. Fobs., PI. XXXIII. Striatopora limbata.) Distinguishing ('h a ra c - ters.—11 atlier irregularly disposed oval calices: mod- erately strong peristomes, with radiating ridges run- ning out upon the thickened walls; corallites abruptly bent outwards. Found on the " ... south Shore of Lake Erie, near Eighteen Mile Creek.'' ( Eaton, Geol. Text-book. p. 39.) Common at Morse Creek. Genus MONOTRYPA. Xicholsox. [Ety. : Monos, one ; trypa, hole.] (1879 : Nicholson, Tabulate Corals of the Paleozoic Period, p. 293.) Corallum composed of long, slender, prismatic corallites, which are of two kinds, not conspicuously different from each other. The large tubes are aggregated into clusters or ''monticules,'' and very slightly differ in size from the smaller ones. The smaller tubes occupy all the spaces be- tween the monticules. All the corallites of both kinds are thin-walled, regularly polygon;! 1, and similarly tabulate, the tabulae being remote and few in number, and not uncommonly disposed at corresponding levels in contig- uous tubes. MONOTKYPA FRUTICOSA. (Hall.) (Fig. 20.) ( ('h;rt t'tes fruticosus. Hall. 111. Dev. PL XXXVIII.) Distinguishing Characters.— Tubes passing upwards and gently bending outwards from a central imaginary axis; numerous small, low, monticules, scattered over the surface. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Buffalo, N. Y. : The Society


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