204 Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria. 



14. Windsor. 



We carefully examined the Tertiary grits overlying the .Silurian 

 in the railway cutting under the Dandenong Road at Windsor, 

 but were not successful in finding any fossils. However, in a 

 collection presented by the Mining Department to the Working 

 Men's College are some samples of a ferruginous sandstone 

 containing a few fossil casts and labelled " Railway Cutting, 

 Windsor." We have no reason to doubt the correctness of the 

 label, as a part of the cutting is now inaccessible owing to a 

 retaining wall having been built. 



Fossils obtained : — Polyzoa ; Spondylus pscudoradula, M'Coy ; 

 Cardita poiynema, Tate; Barbatia simnlans, Tate; B. cei/eporacea, 

 Tate ; Lima linguliformis, Tate ; L. bassit, T. Woods ; Phos 

 tardicrescens % Tate. 



15. South Yarra. 



The low platform of rock left in the angle formed by the 

 junction of the Gippsland and Brighton Railways is in parts 

 very full of casts and we were fortunate in obtaining some large 

 blocks which were very rich and which we carried home bodily 

 for careful examination. Although the fossils are so different 

 from those hitherto dealt with, with the exception of those from 

 Windsor, the lithological character of the matrix is similar to 

 that of the previous sections. We have not found any fossils in 

 the rocks overlying the platform nor have we been able to detect 

 any physical break between them. The upper beds are usually 

 mottled sands, but in places are as strongly cemented by iron as 

 are the lower ones. An examination of the sections along the 

 line towards Hawksburn and towards Prahran does not ajjpear to 

 throw any light on the difficulty. We are inclined, in view of 

 the section in Royal Park, described below, to think that a 

 distinct palseontological break will be yet found and that the 

 upper beds are really a part of the series exposed along the 

 Brighton coast. 

 Zoantharia. 



Coral casts. 

 Crustacea. 



Crab carapace. 



