5 
NOTOTHERIUM MITCHELLI, Owen. 
Part of the centrum of a dorsal vertebra. — No. 2. 
Fragment of a mandible, with remains of two molars. — Nos. 3 
and 10. 
A long and broad plate of bone which, so far as can be seen of 
it, appears from certain indications to be the blade of a scapula, much 
weathered and broken before burial and now encrusted with matrix 
which it is not worth while to remove.— No. 25. 
Distal end of a femur, imperfect — No number. 
Piece of a rib. — No. 33. 
Distal moiety of a humerus minus the articular region. — Nos 2 
and 8. In the like condition and probably from the same skeleton 
as No. 25. 
Fragment from the middle of a humerus — No. 13. 
Piece of the head of a tibia (?;. — No. 44. A fragment difficult to 
determine satisfactorily. 
A fragment of a long bone with tooth marks of Thylacoleo. — No 
number. 
Euowenia grata, de Vis. 
Part of a lumbar vertebra. — No. 2. 
Portion of a mandible — No. 12, 
Greater part of a young ulna, wanting the epiphysis at the 
proximal end and a portion of the shaft with its articulating surface 
at the distal end. — No. 35. If this is rightly determined, Euowenia 
had a longer forearm than other Nototheres. 
MACROPODID^. 
We know certain bones of one extinct kangaroo — Macropus 
faunus — but it would hardly be judicious to identify with them bones 
from Northern Queensland merely on account of correspondence in size. 
The teeth of M. faunus, however, intimate that it was equal in dimen- 
sions to M. magister ; and, since this indirect clue to the identifica- 
tion of bones of the larger kangaroos is the only one available, the 
specimens following are provisionally referred to M. magister : more 
especially as this happens to be the commonest of the extinct Macro- 
pods. 
Macropus magister, de Vis. 
A fragment of the ischiadic bone of the pelvis — No. 3. 
A fragment of the iliac bone of the pelvis. — No. 3. 
A splinter from a long bone. — No. 6. 
Fragment from the head of a tibia. — No. 11. 
Head of a right tibia, articular surface fairly perfect. — No. 37. 
Proximal two-thirds of a fifth metatarsal of a left foot. — No. 42. 
Part of the distal end of a femur. — No number. 
