1 Frederick Chapman : 



Tate; Argobuccitttim pratti, Tate sp. ; Lotorittin tor- 

 tirostrc, Tate sp. ; Nassa tatei, T. Woods ; Lyria harpii- 

 laria, Tate; Marginella propinqiia, Tate; M. zventworthi,, 

 T. Woods; Titrris (?)trilirata, Harris sp. ; Bathytoma. 

 rhomboidalis, T. Woods sp. ; Bela (Daphnobela) graciU 

 lima, T. Woods sp. ; Conns cuspidatns, Tate; Cypraea 

 suhpyridata, Tate ; Trivia avellanoides, McCoy ; Natica. 

 hamiltonensis, T. Woods; Solarium acutiim, T. Woods; 

 Titrritella murrayand, Tate ; Siliquaria occliisa, T. Woods, 

 sp. ; Scaphander tenuis, Harris ; Vaginella eligmostoma, 

 Tate ; Dentalium aratum, Tate. 



The above list does not seem to include any species which; 

 are distinctive of either Balcombian or Janjukian, for they all 

 have an extensive geological range. ^ 



A further suite of fossils was recorded from the ironstone- 

 band at Landslip Point by the present writer in 1914,'^ the 

 result of an extended search made by Mr. R. A. Keble and him- 

 self. These fossils are : — ' 



Placotrochus sp. ; Sphenotrochus emarciatus, Duncan ; Ditrupa 

 cornea, L. sp., var. wormbetiensis, McCoy; Terebratula 

 (?)aldingae, Tate; Magellania garibaldiana, Davidson 

 sp. ; Pecten foulcheri, T. Woods; P. cf. flindersi, Tate; 

 P. praecttrsor. Chapman ; Limatiila sp. ; Cuspidaria sub- 

 rostrata, Tate; Dentalium mantelli, Zittel; Latirus (?)ac- 

 tinostephes, Tate sp. ; Oliva sp. ; Columbarium acantho- 

 stephes, Tate sp. 



Among the above ^fossils, Ditrupa cornea, var. wormbetiensis- 

 is especially typical of Janjukian beds. Terebratula aldingae is- 

 a restricted Janjukian form, as are also Pecten prae cursor and 

 P. flindersi. 



The writer has also (loc. supra cit.) compared these fer-^ 

 ruginous gravels with the ** older gold drifts " in Western Vic- 

 toria, where, at Stawell,^ they contain a fairly extensive series- 

 of Janjukian marine fossils. 



6. See P. Chapman, Mem. Nat. Mus. Melbourne, No. 5, 1914, p. 29, par. S. 



7. Loc. supra cit., pp. 29, 30. 



8. Vict. Naturalist, Vol. xxl., 1905, pp. 178-180. 



