208 Proceedings of tJte Royal Society of Victoria. 



family, and the partial tilling up of them, which Dr. MacGillivray 

 describes, is merely an intermediate stage in the closure, and 

 there are not two forms of zooecia as implied in the description. 



L. angulopora, T. Woods. T.R.S. S.A., 1879, p. 7. 



This is not found fossil. It is living in New South Wales. 

 The form described by Dr. MacGillivray (T.R.S. V., 1875, p. 46) 

 as "?L. angulopora " is not this species. I have some small 

 fragments of that form, which I have not been able to place, 

 indeed I doubt if they belong to this family. 



L. magna, T. Woods. T.R.S. S.A., 1879, p. 7. 



This is referred by Mr. Waters (Q.J.G.S., 1885, p. 295) to the 

 genus Microporella. I have not seen this species ; it is not 

 recorded for Victoria. It occurs in the Mount Gambier ajid 

 Aldinga deposits. 



L. guineensis, Busk. B.M.C. II., p. 98. 



This has been recorded by Mr. Waters from Curdie's Creek. 

 I have not found it in any of the material examined by me. 



Capularia canariensis, Busk. Crag Polyzoa, p. 87. 



I have found this in our Tertiaries, and Mr. Waters records it 

 from Aldinga, S.A. These last two species should probably be 

 united. In Miss Jelly's catalogue, L. guineensis is given as a 

 synonym of C. canariensis. 



Selenaria maculata, Busk. B.M.C. II., p. 101. 



S. alata, T. Woods. T.R.S. S.A., 1879, p. 11. 

 Also livin" on the Australian coasts. 



S. punctata, T. Woods. T.R.S. S.A., 1879, p. 9. 

 (PI. XXIV., Fig. 2). 



S. fenestrata, Haswell. Pr. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., 1880, p. 42. 



This species is not found fossil. Dr. MacGillivray quotes 

 Haswell's species as a synonym, but it is very doubtful whether 

 it be so, as all that Haswell says about it is that it differs from 

 S. maculata " in the presence of two small fenestrae on the 



