UNRECORDED GENERA OF THE OLDER TERTIARY FAUNA. 167 
41. New Britain— Communicated by Rev. B. Danks, of 
42. Duke of York Is.— the New Britain Mission. 
43. Motu—Grammar and Vocabulary of the Motu Language, 
New Guinea, by Rev. W. G, Lawes, second edition ; 
Chas. Potter, Government Printer, Sydney. 
£2 The Council of the Royal Society wishes here to acknowledge 
the courtesy of the Rev. Dr. Cosh, Sydney, Chairman of the Board 
of New Hebrides Missions, in granting the use of the Mission 
map (See Plate 9) to illustrate the localities mentioned im Mr. 
Ray’s paper. 
UNRECORDED GENERA or tar OLDER TERTIARY 
FAUNA or AUSTRALIA, INCLUDING DIAGNOSES OF SOME 
New GENERA AND SPECIES. 
By Professor Rautpu Tart, F.G.8., F.L.8., Hon. Memb. 
[With Plates X.- XIII.] 
[Read before the Royal Society of N. S. Wales, July 5, 1893.] 
Iv is now nearly five years ago that the Society published my 
‘Census of the Fauna of the Older Tertiary of Australia.” During 
that interval much additional material has been acquired, and 
observations in the field touching the stratigraphical phenomena 
have been recorded, and it now seems desirable to make known the 
new facts by way of a Supplement to the Census, including corri- 
genda as well as addenda. 
The beds at the following sections, which had been tentatively 
included in the Miocene, are now transferred to the Eocene, viz., 
those at Cheltenham, Port Philip Bay; those in the Moorabool 
Valley, Geelong; the Turritella beds of Table Cape; and the 
marbles of the Great Australian Bight. These removals limit the 
Miocene to the oyster-beds of the Aldinga and River Murray 
