33 
(67.) 1876. Stephens (Prof. W. J.) Notes on a Labyrinthodcnt Fossil from Cockatoo 
Island, Port Jack 3011 . Proc. Linn. Soc. X. S. Wales, 2nd ser., Vol. I, Part 3, pp. 931, et seq. 
(68.) 1887. Stephens (Prof. W. J.) On tho Biloela Labyrinthodont. P> ■oc. Linn. Soc. X. S. 
Wales, 2nd ser., Vol. I, Part 4, 1SX7, pp. Ill 3—1 1H 1 , Plate XIV. 
Iii the second of these papers there arc also important general remarks 
on the II a wlce sb ury- Wia namat ta beds and their relation to the underlying 
strata. 
(69.) 1887. Stephens (Prof. W. J.) On some Additional Labyrinthodont Fossils from 
the Hawkesbury Sandstones of New South Wales. Proc. Linn. Sue. X. s. Wales, 2nd ser., 
Vol. I, pt. 4, 1887, pp. 1175, Sec., Plate XXII. 
(70.) 1887. Ratte (P.) Note on two New Fossil Plants from the Wianamatta Shales, 
Proc. Linn. Soc. X. S. Wales, 2nd ser., Vol. I, pt. 4, pp. 1078-10S1, Plates XVI and XVII. 
(71.) 1886. Feisimante! (Dr. 0.) The Fossil Flora of some of the Coal-fields in Western 
Bengal. Pala-ontoloyica Indica, Ser. XII ( The Fossil Flora of the Gondwana System, Vol. IV, 2J,pp 
25 and 72. 14 Plates. Calcutta, 1SSG. 
The second part of Yol. IV of the Gondwana Flora contains descrip- 
tions and illustrations of various interesting plants from several coal-fields in 
Western Bengal, which I had collected during my geological excursions in 
1881 and 18S2-S3. As this part forms the conclusion of my Gondwana 
Flora, I have found it profitable to add, also, several chapters of general 
contents referring to the previous Lower Gondwanas. 
In the introduction to the entire Yol. IY, but which is published with 
this second part, I noticed, also, several publications, which appeared since I 
left India in 1883, and which treated of the coal and plant-bearing beds in 
India, as well as in other parts of Asia, Australia, and Africa ; and at the 
end of this introduction I have given a comparative table of tlic various strata 
in various countries, which appeared to me to represent best our present 
knowledge of the various relations. 
(72.) 1887. Felstmantel (Dr. 0.) Ub or die pflanzen und Kohleu-fuhrcnden Scbichten in 
Indien (beziehungswoise Asien), Afrika, und Australian, und darin vorkommende 
glacials Erscbeinungen. Sitzungslerichte der K. lohm. Gesellsch. der Wissencliaften, 1837, pp. 
1-102. 
It was my intention to show in this paper how, according to the latest 
literature (up to 1SSG), the various coal and plant-hearing beds in the above 
mentioned countries arc to he correlated. 
There is, at first, a pretty detailed sketch of the Indian Gondwana 
System with its fossils. Mention is made of the discovery, in 1S85, of peculiar 
nodules in a certain conglomerate in the Salt Range in India, by which 
11« 104-S9 F 
