president's address. G71 



I. Preface, setting forth briefly the design and objects of the 

 Memorial, with a list of the names of the Subscribers. 



II. Biographical Memoir of Sir William Macleay, written by 

 Mr. Fletcher. 



III. Contributions to a knowledge of Ceratodus. Part i. The 

 Blood-vessels. By Professor W. Baldwin Spencer, 34 pp. 



IV. On the Pliocene Mollusca of New Zealand. By Professor 

 F. W. Hutton, F.R.S., 57 pp. 



V. A monograph of the Temnocephaleaj. By Professor W. A. 

 Haswell, 60 pp. 



VI. On an apparently new type of the Platyhelrainthes 

 (Trematoda?). By Professor W. A. Haswell, 5 pp. 



VII. On the muscular anatomy of Palinurus Edtvardsii, 

 Hutton. By Professor T. Jeffery Parker, F.R.S., and Josephine 

 Gordon Rich, 18 pp. 



VIII. On the anatomy of the muzzle of Ornithorhynchus. By 

 Professor J. T. Wilson and Dr. C. J. Martin, 10 pp. 



IX. On rod-like tactile organs in the muzzle of Ornithorhynclms. 

 By Professor J. T. Wilson and Dr. C. J. Martin, 11 pp. 



X. On Parmacochlea Fischeri, Smith. By C. J. Hedley, 3 pp. 



XI. On the geographical relations of the floras of Norfolk and 

 Lord Howe Islands. By Professor Ralph Tate, 16 pp. 



XII. On an undescribed Acacia from New South Wales. By 

 Baron Sir Ferdinand von Mueller, F.R.S., 4 pp. 



XIII. Description of a new Hakea from Eastern New South 

 Wales. By Baron Sir Ferdinand von Mueller, F.R.S., and J. H. 

 Maiden, F.L.S., 2 pp. 



XIV. A description of some of the implements and weapons 

 of the Alligator Tribe, Port Essington, N.A. By R. Etheridge, 

 junr., about 20 pp. 



The work wall be illustrated by thirty-five plates, which have, 

 in the majority of cases, been lithographed by R. Wendel, and 

 printed by Messi's. Troedel, and are, as I consider, very satis- 

 factorily executed. 



