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PKOCEEDrNGS 0¥ THE &EOLOGICAL SOCIETY. [April 24, 



Chonetes cracowensis. 



Wealwandanga. 

 Productus or Strophalosia. 



Cracow Creek. 



I Pleurotomaria rotunda. 



Cretaceous Fossils. 

 Maryborough. 



Cyprina expansa. 

 Trigonia nasuta. 

 Crenatula? gibbosa. 



CucuUsea robusta. 



costata. 



quadrata. 



Inoceramus marathdnensis. 



multiplicatus. 



pernoides. 



Nucula gigantea. 

 Leda elongata. 

 Tellina mariseburiensis. 



, sp. ? 



Avicula alata. 

 Natica lineata. 

 Panopsea sulcata. 



Marathon Station. 



Inoceramus allied to problematicus. 

 Ancyloceras, sp. 



Hughenden. 



Avicula hughendenensis. 

 Ammonites Beudanti, var. Mitcbelli. 



Ammonites Daintreei. 

 Aspidorhynchus (tail and scales). 



McKinlay Eange. 

 Ammonites Sutherlandi. 



Oolitic Fossils. 



Pleurotomaria Cliftoni. 



Homomya. 



Pholadomya. 



Myacites, sp. 



allied to tenuistriatus. 



Tancredia. 



Appendioa II. 



Notes on Fossil Plants from Queensland, Australia. By William 

 Careutheks, Esq., F.E.S., F.G.S., Keeper of the Botanical De- 

 partment in the British Museum. 



Tbe fine series of Lepidodendroid remains from the Old Red 

 Sandstone rocks are perhaps the most important group of fossil 

 plants which Mr. Daintree has brought from Queensland. They 

 supply the means of restoring a remarkable plant in all its parts, 

 fragments only of which have been hitherto known, and these have 

 been misunderstood and misinterpreted. Further, they clear up the 

 reports that have at times been circulated as to the occurrence of a 

 Lepidodendron in the Australian coal-beds, which Mr. Keene affirmed 



