AUSTRALIAN QUATERNARY CLIMATES AND MIGRATION 81 



1945 Keble, R. A. The Stratigraphical Range and Habitat of the Diprotodon- 

 tidie in Southern Australia, ibid. 57 (N.S.) I and II. 



1945 Lewis, A. N. Pleistocene Glaciation in Tasmania. Pap. and Proe. Roy. 

 Soe. Tasmania, 1944. 



1945 Zeuner, E. The Pleistocene Period, its Climate, Chronology and Faunal 

 Successions. 8vo London. 



1946 Keble, R. A. The Sunklands of Port Phillip and Bass Strait. Nat. Mus. 

 Melb. Mem. 14, II. 



1946 Keesing, Felix, M. Native Peoples of the Pacific "World, 8vo New York. 

 1946 Teichert, C. Contributions to the Geology of Houtman's Abrolhos, West- 

 ern Australia. Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, LXXI, 3 and 4. 



EXPLANATION OP PLATE. 



Plate 2. 



Fig. 1. Suffolk, England. Pliocene bone implement from beneath the Red 



Crag, illustrated by Moir (1932). 

 Fig. 2. Pejark Marsh, Victoria. Fragment of a limb bone, with one of its 



corners sliced off by an oblique curved cut. About natural size. From 



Spencer and Waleott (1911). 

 Fig. 3. Pejark Marsh. Concave and convex fractures, producing a pointed 



fragment. According to Spencer and Waleott (1911) the convex 



fracture is due to the entry of pointed teeth penetrating the 



bone, both from above and below ; the concave fracture may 



have originated from an incision in the broad end of the bone. Nearly 



natural size. From Spencer and Waleott (1911). 

 Fig. 4. Pejark Marsh. Piece of limb-bone with curved cuts attributed by 



Spencer and Waleott (1911) to Thylacoleo. About natural size. 

 Fig. 5. Pejark Marsh. Oblique cuts believed by Spencer and Waleott (1911) 



to be similar to those cut with the upper pre-molar of Thylacoleo. 



About natural size. 

 Fig. 6. Suffolk, England. Pliocene bone implement from beneath the Red 



Crag, illustrated by Moir (1932). 

 Fig. 7. Bushfield Axe, from Bushfield near Warrnambool, Victoria. Two- 

 thirds natural size. 

 Fig. 8. Buninyong Bone from Buninyong, Victoria. From De Vis (1900). 



About two-thirds natural size. 

 Fig. 9. Colongulac Bone from Colongulac, Victoria. Side view, showing the 



confluence of the two notches. From Spencer and Waleott (1911). 



About natural size. 

 Fig. 10. Pejark Marsh. Lower incisor of Diprotodon obtained in bone bed 



below tuff. About two-thirds natural size. 

 Fig. 11. Pejark Marsh. Portion of the diastema of Diptrodon showing a 



straight cut; the concavity is the socket of the lower incisor. About 



natural size. 



