SO 
Macropus anak, Owen. 
A fragmentary maxilla bearing the molars M“ and M 3 , and a 
right lower incisor have been identified as belonging to this species. 
De Vis found that in Queensland the bones associated with the 
teeth of Macropus anak indicated an animal much more massive than 
a living kangaroo of similar size; in view of this a number of bones 
of Macropine type, but short and heavy, are provisionally ascribed 
to this species. They consist of cervical, dorsal, lumbar, and caudal 
vertebrae, a fragmentary scapula, the distal half of a humerus, and 
fragments of the femur, tibia, fibula, as well as numerous more or 
less perfect bones of the pes. 
