250 
MEMOIRS OF TEE QUEENSLAND MUSEUM. 
Deputy Chief Government Geologist, showing the site of the discovery on Durham 
Downs, was reproduced. It is hoped that additional remains will be forthcoming 
from this locality later. 
NEW RECORDS. 
Among our records of Queensland vertebrate fossils from new localities are the 
following : — 
Diprotodon australis Owen. 
Mandibular fragment with one incomplete molar from the Flinders River, 
Maxwelton, W.Q. Presented by Mr. Rex W. Crane (F. 1791). The Flinders River 
region has yielded a rich store of marine Cretaceous fossils, but this specimen, which 
was picked up in the bed of the river at Maxwelton, must have come from recent 
deposits. 
Diprotodon australis. 
Mandibular fragment with remains of two molars from Bluff Downs, Mr. 
Ernest White’s station, north-west of Charters Towers. Presented by Mr. C. M. 
Rogers (F. 1907). The head of a left humerus was also received. Mr. Michael 
Rogers, who forwarded these fossils, says that they were found “ under the basalt 
outcrop of that country.” 
Diprotodon australis. 
Maxillary fragment with two molars (F. 2019). Picked up by aboriginal 
stockman at the junction of the Dart and Broken Rivers, Urana Run, Collinvale, 
Bowen, N.Q. Presented by Mr. A. Garbutt, and received through Mr. J. A. Rheuben 
and the Department of Agriculture and Stock, Brisbane. The two molars, which 
are well preserved, represent an aged individual. 
Diprotodon minor Huxley. 
Mandibular fragment with symphysis and two incomplete incisors (F. 1822). 
Presented by the Rev. C. H. Massey. This was obtained near Murgon, S.E. Q., but was 
handed to donor without precise locality. The writer has shown that there are 
distinctive features in the symphyseal region between Diprotodon australis and 
D. minor. 9 
Nototherium sp. 
Mandibular fragment with tW'O molars (F. 2049). Near Logan Downs Station,. 
Clermont, Q. Presented by Mr. Gordon A. Fairbairn. This fragment, which is 
much abraded, was “ picked up on surface under Telegraph Line, about five miles 
from Logan Downs Station towards Grosvenor Downs.” 
Palorchestes sp. 
Fragments of tw r o molars (F. 1761), which are mainly alveolar, found at a 
depth of 40 feet in a well at Castle Creek, Rannes, S.E. Q. These were found by 
Mr. R. S. Philp and received through Professor H. C. Richards. These fragments 
may represent anew species, but the material is inadequate for precise determination. 
9 1926, Longman, Mem. Qld. Mus., vol. viii, p. 18. 
