MEMOIRS OF TEE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM , Yol. X, Part III. 
A NEW DINOSAUR. 
From the Queensland Cretaceous. 
By Heber A Longman, Director, Queensland Museum. 
(Plates XY-XVII, Text-figures 1-3.) 
Introduction. — When visiting “ Clutha” Station, Maxwelton, North-west 
Queensland, in August last. Dr. M. J. McKillop, of Brisbane, was interested 
in some large fossil remains of vertebrae which were shown to him by his 
brother, Mr. H. J. McKillop. the manager. In response to my request, through 
Dr. McKillop, these specimens were carefully packed and forwarded to the 
Queensland Museum, where they were received on 9th January, 1933. 
Locality. Clutha is north of the Flinders River, and the homestead 
is 34 miles from Maxwelton, on the Great Northern Railway, 337 miles west 
of Townsville, North Queensland. 
Text-figure 1.- Part of Clutha Station showing Whitewood Paddock. 
Site of Fossils marked X. 
Del. T. O. Marshall, from Qld. Four Mile Maps, Sheet 82 [Enlarged). 
Mr. H. J. McKillop informs me that the fossils were first discovered 
by the overseer, Mr. H. B. Wade, who noted them on the surface partly 
exposed in black soil on open down country, “ in what is known as Whitewood 
Paddock, at a spot approximately three miles west of the homestead and about 
