Photograph No. 4 is the tibia, broken into no less than four 
pieces, and not quite perfect as regards length, but still very 
nearly so. The proximal and distal ends are preserved, and, 
together with the shaft, as at present constituted, measure over 26 
inches in length. 
One scapula, a humerus, radius, ulna, and part of the wrist, 
together with a few ribs and several vertebrae, are also sufficiently 
intact to yield comparative osteological data. 
The importance of the specimen as an aid to the determination 
of the later geological history of the Island is obvious. 
The scale in the photographs is English inches. 
The following measurements are also of interest: 
Humerus (distally imperfect in width) 
Radio Ulnar length (imperfect) 
Calcaneum 
Metatarsal bone ... 
H. H. SCOTT, 
Cu RATOR. 
La u nceston Museum, 
November 3RD, 1905. 
