41 



Ehynclionella squamosa, Huff on ; Terebratulina Scoulari, 

 Tate; 'I.T^dNidLmni, Etheridge ; Magasella "Woodsiana, Tate; 

 Waidheimia Garibaldiana, 'Davidson; W. grandis, Woods; 

 W. Taylori, Etheridge ; W. Tateana, Woods; W. Macleani, 

 Tate; W. divaricata, Tate; W. Corioensis, McCoy; Terebratula 

 vitreoides, Woods. 



All the Polyzoa enumerated by Mr. Waters. 



Leiocidaris australis, Duncan ; Ecbinus "Woodsii, Laube ; 

 Temnecbiiius novus, Laube ; Catopygus elegans, Laube ; Mi- 

 -■craster brevistella, iaz^^e ; Brissiopsis Archeri, Woods; Holaster 

 australifc, Duncan ; Ecbinolampas Gambieriensis, Woods : 

 Lovenia Forbesii, Woods ; Eupatagus rotundus, Duncan ; E. 

 Murrayensis and E. AVrigbtii, Laube ; Aracbnoides australis, 

 Laube ; Megalaster compressus, Duncan. 



Deltocyatbus viola, Duncan ; D. alatus, Woods ; D. excisus, 

 Duncan ; Sphenotrochus australis, Duncan ; Flabellum Yic- 

 -fcoriae, Placotrocbus deltoideus, Antillia lens, Balanophyllia 

 Australiensis, Duncan. 



The ostracods and foraminifera catalogued by the Messrs 

 Brady, 



SPECIES OF THE LOWER MUREAYIA??'. 



This series is characterized rather by lithological than 

 palaeontological characters, which latter are somewhat negative, 

 ;as the species are few in number and somewhat sparsely 

 -distributed. It is often highly charged with gypsum, and then 

 fossils are rarely present. Cetacean remains have occured to 

 me only at this horizon, notably at MacBean's Pound, four 

 miles from Blanchetown, whence I obtained the entire lower 

 jaw of a balenoid whale, six feet long, and at Murbko, 14 miles 

 north of Blanchetown, whence I extracted a cranium. The 

 anterior half of a Paguroid-fish in excellent preservation was 

 •obtained at Morgan from these beds. 



At Morundi, a few miles south from Blanchetown, this 

 series is represented by a brown sandy calciferous rock of 

 about 40 feet thick, distinctly bedded, with lines of echinoderms 

 in the planes. Here Lovenia Forbesii and Magasella Woodsiana 

 •occur in great profusion ; it is also the chief station for 

 Megalaster comjyressus. 



SECTIOXS OF THE NEWER TERTIARY DEPOSITS OF THE UPPER 

 SECTION OF THE RITER. 



1. At the Boundarji, 235 oniles from Blanchetown. — The cliff 

 at the river margin is composed of about 20 feet of red loam, 

 whilst back from the river coarse-grained sand-rock appears at 

 -a higher level. 



