342 
Details op Bores Nos. 1 to 11, etc. — continued. 
Bore No. 5— continued . 
Depth (feet). 
Nature of Rock. 
Details and Fossil Contents. 
175-189— 
continued. 
Vermes. —Ditrupa cornea, L. sp., yar. worm- 
beiiensis, McCoy. 
Polyzoa .—Selenaria marginata, T. W. ; 
Schizoporella (?) convexa, Mac Gill.; Lepralia 
gippslandii, Waters ; Cellepora fossa , Hasw. 
sp. ; C. tridenticulata, var. nummularia, 
Busk-; Retepora spp., indet. 
Brachiopoda .—Terebratulina catinuliformis , 
Tate. 
Peleoypoda. —Glycimeris maccoyi, Johnst. 
sp. ; G. halli, and yar. intermedia, Pritch. ; 
Gryphaea tarda, Hutton ; Pecten eyrei, Tate ; 
P. murrayanus, Tate ; Dimya dissimilis, Tate ; 
Venus ( Chione ) subroborata, Tate sp. ; Corbula 
ephamilla, Tate ; C. coxi, Pilsbry ; Crassatel- 
lites, cf. kingicoloides, Pritch. 
Gasteropoda. —Liopyrga quadricingulata, 
Tate ; L. sayceana, Tate ; Euchelus tasmanicus, 
T. Woods ; Eglisia triplicata, Tate sp. ; Natica 
cunninghamensis, Harris ; Turritella pagodula, 
Tate ; Fasciolaria rugata, Tate ; Marginella 
prceformicula, sp. nov. ; Terebra subspectabilis , 
Tate sp. ; Tylospira coronata, Tate sp. 
Crustacea. —Claws of Crustacea, indet. 
Pisces. —-Otoliths of teleostean fishes ; Dio- 
don formosus, Chapm. and Pritch. (palatal 
tooth). 
189-190 
A friable, calcareous rock, Eoramieteera. — Orbitolites complanata, Lam.; 
with email fossils Truncaiulina ungeriana, d’Orb. sp. ; T. haidin- 
geri, d’Orb. sp. ; Anomalina ammonoides, Bss. 
ep. ; Roialia clafhrata, Brady; Polysfomella 
crispa, L. sp. 
Ecuinodermata.— Echinoid spines, indet. 
Vermes. —Ditrupa cornea, L. sp., var. worm- 
beiiensis, McCoy. 
Ostracoda. —Argilloecia badia, G. S. B. ; 
Bythocypris tumefacta, Chapra.; Cythere 
scintillulala, G. S. B. 
♦ 
Notes on Bore No. 5. 
Sub-aerial and fluviatile deposits of Recent and Pleistocene age obtain from 
the surface down to 133 feet. From 133 to 155 feet we have marine and 
estuarine conditions prevailing, as shown by the foraminifera, probably of 
Newer Pleistocene age. Then follows a Kalimnan deposit from 155 to 163 
feet, as proved by the typical fossils Glycmieris halli, Liopyrga quadricingulata, 
Turritella pagodula and Marginella muscarioides. A mixed fauna prevails 
in samples 163 to 189, consisting of a few Kalimnan and many typical Jan- 
jukian fossils. From 189 to 190 feet the calcareous rock there found is 
typically Janjukian. One of the chief forms of interest found in the samples 
from 163 to 189 feet is Turritella pagodula, “a gasteropod characteristic of the 
Kalimnan of Beaumaris, Port Phillip, and of Jemmy’s Point, Gippsland 
Lakes. 
