AUSTRALIAN SNAKES. 
57 
tlie tail commences; a series of irregular loop-lilce bauds a scale wide which 
differ considerably in shape in each reptile coyer the back. The belly is of 
a shining dark lead color, much resembling that of the black-lead used 
for polishing grates or stoves. Plates and scales of the head, and the side 
of the face, yellow r -spotted. In spirit, all the yellow marks turn white. 
The Broad-headed Snake is very local, and has never been found in 
any part of Australia except on the south-east coast. All the specimens in 
the Museum, and many hundreds distributed among kindred institutions, 
were obtained in the immediate neighbourhood of Sydney. 
During the summer months they are very scarce, perhaps on 
account of their nocturnal habits, but as they hibernate under flat stones 
in sunny localities, it is not difficult to collect a good many during the 
cold season; they are, however, not so numerous as they were six or 
eight years ago, their haunts having been invaded by the builder and 
the gardener. Broad-headed Snakes frequent open scrubby country; and 
the rocky coast-line from the entrance of Port Jackson to Botany Bay is 
still much frequented by them. On the shores of Middle Harbour, and of 
the Lane Cove and Parramatta inlets, many specimens occur. Pew persons 
have ever seen this species, as it is not often met with in the day-time. 
The bite of this snake is not sufficiently strong to endanger the life 
of man or of the larger animals; and experiments with goats and other 
quadrupeds, such as dogs, ant-eaters (. Echidna ), &c., have never proved fatal. 
The greater number observed seldom exceeded eighteen inches in length- 
individuals of thirty-six inches are perhaps the largest ever obtained. If a 
person be bitten by one of them, the simple act of sucking the wound is 
sufficient to avert any unpleasant sensation ; but should nothing be done, 
a violent headache, a certain stiffness in the spine, and some local swelling, 
is generally the consequence. It takes from thirty minutes to an hour 
before these symptoms set in. 
The snake which Mr. Schlegel describes as Naja bungaroides, in his 
Abbildungen, tab. 48, figs. 17 and 18, is one of the many varieties of the 
present species. 
