Dr. 0. Feistmantel — The Flora of E. Australia. 491 



Prof. Trautschold described one species from the Bussian Jura. 



Glossopt. Browniana, Brong., Gl. elegans, Fstm., Gl.primceva, Fstm., 

 Gl. Clarlcei, Fstm., Gl. linearis, M'Coy, from the Lower Coal- 

 measures (Greta, Stony Creek), New South Wales, and the Lower 

 Carboniferous (Arowa), N. S. W. 



Glossopt. Browniana, Brong., Gl. ampla, Dan., Gl. reticulum, Dan., 

 Gl. elongata, Dan., Gl. cordata, Dan., Gl. Tainiopteroides, Fstm., Gl. 

 Wilkinsoni, Fstm., Gl. parallela, Fstm., from the Newcastle beds 

 (Upper Coal-measures), New South Wales. 



Gangamopteris obliqua, Gang, spatulata, and G. angustifolia, 

 M'Coy, from the Bacchus Marsh sandstones (Lower Mesozoic), 

 Victoria. The importance of these forms, was pointed out before, 

 when the Bacchus Marsh sandstones were mentioned. 



Gangamopteris angustifolia, M'Coy, from the Newcastle beds (Upper 

 Coal-measures). 



Sagenopteris rhoifolia, Presl, from the Talgai diggings, Queensland. 



Sagenopt. Tasmanica, Fstm., from the Mesozoic beds in Tasmania. 



S.—LYCOPODIACEjE:— Lepidodendron notlium, Ung. (Carr.), 

 Devonian, Queensland (Mt. Wyatt, Broken Eiver, etc.) ; New South 

 Wales (Goonoo-Goonoo on the Peel Eiver, Back Creek diggings 

 on the Barrington Eiver). 



Lepidodendron Veltheimianum, Sternb., and Vollcmannianum, Sternb., 

 Lower Carboniferous, Smith's Creek (near Stroud), New South Wales. 

 The Eev. W. B. Clarke's specimen of Lepid. rimosum, Sternb., of which 

 he sent a photograph, seems to belong to Lep. Veltheimianum, Sternb. 



Lepidodendron dichotomum ( ? ), Sternb., Lower Carboniferous, 

 Smith's Creek (Stroud), New South Wales. 



Cyclostigma australe, Fstm., from the Lower Carboniferous, Smith's 

 Creek (near Stroud), New South Wales. This plant, together with 

 the others from the same locality, appeared to me to indicate Prof. 

 Heer's " Ursastufe." 



±.— GY CADE ACE jE -.—Otozamites (comp. Mandelslohi, 1 Kurr.).— 

 The first Otozamites from Australia, Talgai diggings, Queensland 

 (Upper Mesozoic Coal-beds). 



Genus Noggerathiopsis, Fstm. — I established this generic name 

 (1878) for those leaves which, in India and Australia, were described 

 as Noggerathia. When examining, last year, the Indian leaves, I 

 found that they differed from Noggerathia, and named them Noggera- 

 thiopsis ; finding afterwards that the Australian leaves also belong 

 to this genus, the same name is now used for them. 



Similar leaves were described from the Altai by Prof. Goppert, 

 also with the generic name Noggerathia, and the formation was 

 described as Permian. Prof. Schmalhausen (Kiev) has, however, 

 recently stated that this Flora from the Altai, and another Flora on 

 the Upper Tunguska (which at first was also considered Carbon- 

 iferous), are, in fact, of a Jurassic age; the said Noggerathia was 

 placed by him in a new genus, Bhiptozamites ; it appears that 

 Noggerathiopsis and Bhiptozamites are closely allied genera, probably 

 identical. 



1 This is probably a misprint for Mendelsohni. — Edit. Geol. Mag. 



