314 REPORTS OF RESEARCH COMxMlTTEES. 



9. The New South Wales Handbook. Visit of British Associa- 

 tion for Advancement of Science, 1914, Chapter IV., 

 pp. 486-532, by E. C. Andrews, B.A., and C. A. Snss- 

 milch. 



10. The Geolog} of the Cooma DistHct, by W. R. Browne, B.Sc. 



Proceedings of the Roval Society of New South Wales, 



1914, Vol. XLVIII. 



11. The Geology of the Southern Coalfield of New South Wales, 



by L. F. Harper. Memoirs cA the Geological Survey of 

 New South Wales, No. 7, 1915. 



12. Geclogy of the Jenolan Caves Area, by C. A. Su.ssmilch. 



Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales, 



1915, Vol. XLIX., p. 332. 



13. Geology and Petrology of the Great Serpentine Belt of New 



South Wales, byW. N. Benson, B.Sc, Part I. Pro- 

 ceedings Linnean Society of New South Wales, Vol. 

 XXXVIII., 1913; also Part IX., Vol. XLV., 1920. 



B.^ — Notes on the Advance of Physiographic Knowledge 

 of Victoria since January. 1913. 



{By Charles Fenner, D.Sc- and Frederick Chapman, A.L.S.) 



The following is a list of the chief papers dealing with Victorian 

 physiography that have been published since January, 1913: — 



1. T. S. Hart. — On the Country between Melbourne and the 

 Dandenong Creek. Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic, Vol. XXV., 

 Part II., 1913. 



2. J. T. JuTSON. — On the Age and Physiographic Relations of 

 the Older Basalts of Greensborough, &c. Proc. Roy. Soc. 



• Vic, Vol. XXVI., Part I., 1913." 



3. Charles Fenner. — Physiography of the Mansfield District. 

 Proc Roy. Soc. Vic, Vol. XXVI., Part II., 1914. 



4. T. S. Hall. — Some Notes on the Gippsland Lakes. Vic- 

 toi-ian Naturalist, Vol. XXXI., 1914, pp. 33-34. 



5. D. J. Mahony. — The Evolution of Victoria during the 

 Cainozoic Period, B.A.A.&., Melbourne, 1914. 



6. A. S. Kenyon.— The Mallee Country of North- West Vic- 

 toria. B.A.A.S., Melbourne, 1914. 



7. T. S. Hart. — The Central Highlands and Main Divide of 

 Victoria. B.A.A.g., Melbourne, 1914. 



