NOTES ON THE AUSTRALIAN TENIOPTERIDE. 395 
A. ensis, Feistmantel, Mem. Geol. Survey, N. 8S. Wales, Pal. 3, 
1890, p. 116. 
A, Tenison Woodsi, Etheridge, R. Junr., Geol. and Pal. Q’land, 
1892, p. 375. . 
A. Tenison Woodst, Shirley, Add. Foss. Flor. Q’land, 1897, p. 29, 
te Ose a. 
Sp. Char.—“The fronds are long and narrow, nearly three inches, 
and that without being perfect, ribbon-like, or linear lingual, 
hardly tapering, and parallel-sided. The midrib is wide and 
flattened. The veins are very distinct, wide apart, very oblique 
to the midrib, and very little curved, being almost straight. 
They bifurcate at about one-third from the midrib. The veins do 
not fork particularly near the margin, and the latter is not in 
any way serrated ; the former, measured along the margin, are 
about one millimetre apart.” —Ltheridge 
Mr. Etheridge remarks also that ‘“ the outline of the frond is 
much more that of Angiopteridium spathulatum [than A. ensis], 
but the venation is wholly different. From Rosewood, near 
Ipswich. 
Tzeniopteris tasmanica, Johnston. 
Proes. R. Soc. Tas. for 1885 [1886], p. 375. 
Feistmantel, Sitz. K. B. Gesell. Wissens. Math. Naturw. Cl., 
1888, p. 631. . 
Johnston, Geol. Tas., 1888, t. 24, f. 3. 
Feistmantel, Mem. Geol. Survey N.S. Wales, Pal. 3, 1890, p. 115. 
[Feistmantel classes this as a synonym of 7’ Carruther 2, Lens 
Woods. Uhlonosne Utvary v. Tasmanii, 1890, pp. 98, 99, t. 8, 
f. 14. 
Ls ae simple, broadly strap-shaped, not obovate ; midrib 
moderately strong; veins well defined, exceedingly close and 
numerous, parallel, emerging from midrib at an acute angle, and 
immediately bending and reaching margin at a slight angle 
upwards. About one nerve in ten simply furcate near middle of 
wing ; about twenty-four nerves in the space of half an inch. 
Length unknown. Breadth, about forty-six millimetres. Common 
in the shales at foot of Spring Hill.” —Johnston. 
This fern is said to approach Macroteniopteris wianamatte, Feist- 
mantel, differing from it in closer neuration and broad strap-shaped 
form. 7. densinervis, Feistmantel, differs from it in having more 
delicate furcate venation. 
Teeniopteris (Oleandridium ?) fluctuans, Zth. fil. 
Trans. R. Soc. 8. Austr., 1895, xix, pt. 2, p. 139, t. 5, f. 1-3. 
Sp. Char.—‘‘ Frond simple (so far as known), elongately lanceo- 
late, thick, coriaceous, crumpled, lateral margins sinuous ; midrib 
thick, moder ately wide, and possibly longitudinally striated ; s 
secondary veins fine, straight, two in the space of one and a half 
