8 EINAR LÖNNBERG AND L. G. ANDERSSON, DR. E. MJÖBERGS EXPEDITIONS TO AUSTRALIA. 3. REPTILES. 
Tympanocryptis cephalus GTHR. — Six specimens from Noonkanbah, in inte- 
rior of Kimberley, Dec. 1910—Febr. 1911. 
Four specimens from Ooduadatta, Central Australia (probably presented to Dr. 
MJÖBERG). 
Diporophora bilineata Gray. — 22 specimens from various localities in N. W. 
Australia, as well from the interior (f. i. Noonkanbah etc.) as from the coast (f. i. 
Broome, Derby etc.), 1910—1911. 
Physignathus gilberti Gray. — Three specimens from the neighbourhood of 
Noonkanbah, St. George Range, Kimberley, N. W. Austr., !2/12 1910—?/2 1911, and 
one from Broome, ””/; 1911. 
Chlamydosaurus kingii Gray. — Three specimens from Derby and one from 
Lower Leverynga, Kimberley. 
Moloch horridus GraY. — One specimen from Carnarvon, West Australia, two 
specimens from Ooduadatta, Central Australia (probably presented to Dr. MJÖBERG). 
Varanus punctatus Gray. — One specimen from Derby. 
Egernia depressa GTHR. — One specimen found under a stone at Cossack, 
West Australia, !?/10 1910. 
This species was originally described from Swan River, and then refound at 
Murchison River. The above recorded locality extends its known distribution con- 
siderably to the north. 
Tiliqua scincoides WHITE. — One specimen from St. George Range, Kimberley, 
N. W. Australia. 
Trachysaurus rugosus GRAY. — Two specimens from Perth and Darling Range, 
West Australia. 
Lygosoma lesueuri Dum. & BIBR. — Six specimens from Broome with surround- 
ings, and from St. George Range in the interior of the Kimberley division are typical 
with regard to the arrangement of the shields. 
The colour is very variable. In the younger specimens the streaks are more 
pronounced, the larger approach more or less the variety inornalum, and one of 
the specimens from Broome, which is more robust than the others, is entirely with- 
out streaks. 
In one specimen, also from Broome, there are only three supraoculars. In 
this respect it agrees with Lygosoma dorsale Bror. from New Guinea, and thus pro- 
ves the difference between L. lesueuri and L. dorsale to be rather slight. 
Another group of specimens, seven in all, from the same habitat, viz. from 
Broome and St. George Range, have the prefrontals more or less separated; in some 
