lxxv. 



liensis, will be found in Baron von Mueller's Fragmenta 

 Phytographise Australa3, the 90th fasiculus of which was issued 

 in January, 1879. 



The literature specially dealing with the fungi of Australia 

 includes the following works omitted by me in my last 

 address : — 



Fbies in Lehm, PL Preiss, vol. ii., pp. 130-140 (1846). 



Berkeley in Hooker's Flora of Tasmania, vol. ii., pp. 241- 

 282, plates 183-184 (1860). 



Kalchbrehtner and De Thuemen in " G-revillea," vol. iv., 

 pp. 70-76 (1876) ; and in Flora ephemer, Eatisbon, No. 

 28 (1878). 



An enumeration of the lichens in the British Museum, which 

 were collected in 1802-5, during the notable voyage of Flinders 

 around these shores, is published in the Proceedings of the 

 Linnean Society, London, for 1879. 



The literature of Australian Miocene Palaeontology has been 

 enriched by the publication of two papers by the Rev. J. E. T. 

 Woods, describing some fossils from the Muddy Creek beds. 

 See Proc. Linn. Soc, N. S. Wales, vol. iii., pp. 222-240, plates 

 20, 21 ; and vol. iv., pp. 1-20, plates 1-4, 1879. The number of 

 species figured and diagnosed is 59 gasteropods and three 

 bivalves. 



A few of the more remarkable and larger species from the 

 Victorian Miocene are dealt with in Decade VI., Pal. of Victoria, 

 by Prof. McCoy ; these are Lovenia Forbesi, Monostychia 

 australis, and the new species, Clypeaster Gippslandicus and 

 Hinnites Corioensis. The same fasiculus contains the descrip- 

 tions of three species of Cetotolites, or ear-bones of whales, 

 probably Ziphioid, and other cetacean remains. These dis- 

 coveries are interesting in connection with the presence of 

 balanoid whales in the Murray beds, remains of which, in- 

 cluding a perfect skull and a lower jaw, form part of the 

 University collection. 



