378 NOTE ON THE FRUCTIFICATION OF GLOSSOPTERIS. 



margin and rather less than half the distance from the margin 

 that they are from the midrib. The two nearest the distal end 

 are very clearly outlined and exhibit just such features as would 

 be expected in sori ; the proximal one is rather faint. They are 

 iiths of an inch apart, from centre to centre, and ^ of an inch in 

 their greatest diameter. In character these sori (for such I take 

 them to be) approach those which Dr. Feistmantel has observed 

 in the Indian G. hrowniana, and will bring the Indian and Aus- 

 tralian fossil into closer relationship than that eminent palaeonto- 

 logist was disposed to admit them. The stone on which the 

 impression is preserved is a very fine-grained chert from the 

 Newcastle Beds at Lake Macquarie Road, near Charlestown. 



OBSERVATIONS ON CERTAIN UNDESCRIBED GALL- 

 MAKING COCCID^ OF THE SUB-FAMILY BRACHY- 



By a. Sidney Olliff, Government Entomologist, New South 

 Wales. 



* This Paper will appear in the Macleay Memorial Volume. 



