KUNGL. SV. VET. AKADEMIENS HANDLINGAR. BAND 52. N:0 l. d 
Another set of Wallabies comprises the following specimens: 2 $£Y »shot on a 
small: grassy. plain in the interior of the Grant Range ”/s 1911; 1 s, 1 ? »shot 
among high grass not far from the Blood Wood creek, the Grant Range» ”/s and 1 s 
10/3 the same locality. About these Dr. MJÖBERG has remarked that they differed 
from the specimens from Fitz Roy river in being more robust, and in having the fur 
especially on the belly thicker and of a more reddish hue. This latter remark is 
fully correct as a comparison shows. It is also true that one of these males has a 
larger skull than any of the others with the greatest length amounting to 158 mm., 
and the condylobasal length to 150 mm., but the other male from the same locality, 
which is equally old, has a skull with the corresponding measurements only amount- 
Fig. 3. Rocks of Mount Anderson among which Macropus robustus 
woodwardi rests in day time. (E. MJöBErRG phot.) 
ing to resp. 143 and 138 mm. which is even less than those of some skulls from 
other localities. The total length in flesh of the largest of these two males is said 
to have been 165 cm., and that of the other 156 cm. while for instance a male from 
Hot Spring measured even 174 cm. Consequently the size of the specimens from the 
interior of the Grant Range does not give any satisfactory characteristic. The two 
old male skulls have a more stout prerobital portion but as only few of the other 
skulls have attained the same age nothing definite can be said about the constancy 
of this feature. No other characteristics of subspecific value can be found on the 
skulls. It remains thus only the thickness of the fur and its somewhat more reddish 
colouration. As this, however, is apparent on the two males only, while the female 
does not differ from specimens from other localities I cannot make out any definite 
distinetness between these specimens and others, the less so as the old males from 
Hot Spring also display a considerable thickness of the fur of the lower side. 
