Identified by photographic comparison with decomposing fungi included in Binion et al., _Macrofungi Associated with Oaks of Eastern North America_. 'Look for Calocera cornea after heavy rains on the barkless, dead wood of oaks and other hardwoods, where it appears as clusters of slick, cylindric fruiting bodies with rounded-off or somewhat sharpened tips. In fact it looks more like a tiny club fungus than a jelly fungus, but microscopic examination reveals the distinctive Y-shaped basidia that characterize members of the Dacrymycetales--a large group within the jelly fungi.' Michael Kuo @ MushroomExpert.com http://www.mushroomexpert.com/calocera_cornea.html