81 
SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES ON THE OCCURRENCE OF 
ABORIGINAL REMAINS DISCOVERED BY CAPTAIN S. A. 
WHITE AT FULHAM (DESCRIBED IN THE PRECEDING 
PAPER), WITH REMARKS ON THE GEOLOGICAL SECTION. 
By Pror.. WALTER HowcHIN.. 
[Read July 11, 1919.] 
REMARKS ON THE BEDS PASSED THROUGH IN THE SINKING. 
The particulars supplied, by Capt. S. A. White relate to 
e 
or examination by the author of the paper, and the following 
remarks have reference to their geological features. The num- 
bers prefixed to the paragraphs correspond to the respective 
beds in Capt. White's descriptions. 
Vo. 2.—The blue tenaceous clay, underlying the 
? 
ed No. 3.—This bed, 3 feet in thickness, represents the 
a which form 
„ommon estuarine forms in the adjacent waters. e matrix 
's a slightly-cemented, somewhat coarse sand, mottled with 
P . This bed gives evidence that the estuary of the 
atawalonga Creek formerly reached this far north, about 
half a mile beyond its present limits. Its upper surface has 
rucked by two channels of erosion subsequently to i 
deposition. 
, Bee 4.—Beneath the raised sea bed, as described 
3bove, is an indurated black clay with its upper surface show- 
ing a plane of erosion, varying in thickness from 10 inches to 
oo: No pl ) 
he clay, but near the top of the deposit a somewhat lighter- 
Placed in water it iid down to an impalpable black mud, 
and after washin Pieft a residue of exceedingly fine white ` 
Sand, mixed with lack granules of a carbonaceous kind. 
