391 
io say to what genus the remains really belong; amongst 
other genera Corynexochus, or perhaps Blountia, may put in 
c vm 
oc.—Neighbourhood of Mount Ida, Heathcote, Vic- 
o diego 
—Ordovician (Gregory) ; Cambrian (Etheridge). 
CAROLINE Creek TRILOBITE REMAINS. 
In my early account of these casts I figured, but left 
unnamed, portions of four cephalons. In each instance a 
glabella was preserved, parts of the neck-rings and anterior 
limbs, and traces of the fixed cheeks. All four types have 
certain features in common, such as the broad, short 
glabellae, deeply excavate anterior areas with thick and 
prominent limbs, and deep neck furrows; they differ only 
in proporti e posue and numbers of pairs of 
glabella furrow 
Since 1882 I have had opportunities to examine other 
examples of the Caroline Creek grit in which these remains 
oceur plentifully, but always Baie the latter in the same 
be lizing imperfect condition. In the absence of complete 
a 
gested P se plan (07 and for m erely descriptive purposes 
perhaps here these cephala had better remain oae dus dF ze 
the same time other genera than those mentioned put 
Samay such as idiot ii Billings ; EE ‘Walcott; (^ 
n P. agodia, Walcot 
PrvcHoPARIA(?) CAROLINENSIS, n, sp. 
Head shield, (?)Conocephalites, rd Proc 
Tas., 1882 (1883), pp. 156 and 162, p i. i., figs. DE 9. (DR I 
Ge s S = Conocephatites (È), Johnston : . Acce. 
o! 
Cha cher broad-oval or oblong, ro 
teriorly, | lind all but in contact with the fillet of the anterior 
limb, broad posteriorly; fillet and neck-ring prominent, the 
mle furrow deep; two pairs of glabella turrows, basal and 
—The outline of € glabella (figs. 8 and 9) and 
that x de 11 are remark dires and it is possible they 
May be identical as t erre 
a 883), Etheridge: Papers and Proc. Roy. Soc. Tas., 1882-3 
(87) Etheridge: Trans. Roy. Soc. S. Austr., xxxii., 1882, p. 3 
