DIPROTODONTIDJ?. 171 



except the right i^j and 1^3 of both sides ; from Gowrie. 

 The cheek-teeth are in an early stage of wear. 



Presented by G. F. Bennett, Esq., 1879. 



Fig. 27. 



Dijjrotodun ausfralis. The skull; from the Pleistocene of Australia. T V 



M. 1. The palatal region of the cranium, showing the four true 

 molars in a much-worn condition, the right i. 2 and i-J of 

 both sides ; from the Pleistocene of Queensland. 



Presented by Sir G. Verdon, 1877. 



47821. Fragment of the premaxillge, showing the three pairs of in- 

 cisors ; from the Pleistocene of Australia. 



Presented ly Dr. George Bennett, 1875. 



38601 x. Part of the premaxillae, transversely bisected, and show- 

 ing sections of i. 1 and of the alveoli of iJ2 and i._3 ; from 

 Eton Vale, Darling Downs. Figured by Owen in the 

 * Phil. Trans.' 1870, pi. xxxvi. fig. 5, and in the ' Extinct 

 Mammals of Australia,' pi. xx. fig. 5. 



Presented ly Sir D. Cooper, Bart., 1869. 



46008. Part of the left premaxilla, containing the three incisors, 

 together with a fragment of the maxilla of the same side 

 with the last three true molars ; from Queensland. These 

 specimens apparently belong to the same individual as 

 the mandible No. 46008 a (p. 175). 



Presented by the Trustees of the Adelaide 

 Museum of Natural History, 1871. 



