The Philosophical magazine; a journal of theoretical, experimental and applied physics . radiating ridges resembling the plates of the are also furnished with four orifices of a lozenge shape, mostsingularly inserted in the plates of the head, and their arms andfingers are exceedingly short. The fingers are composed of tworows of bones, each bone on the one side being inserted betweentwo of the opposite. These fingers appear to be placed in four rowson each of the hands, and pass oflF from the head in a radiating di-rection, commencing at the column and uniting at the


The Philosophical magazine; a journal of theoretical, experimental and applied physics . radiating ridges resembling the plates of the are also furnished with four orifices of a lozenge shape, mostsingularly inserted in the plates of the head, and their arms andfingers are exceedingly short. The fingers are composed of tworows of bones, each bone on the one side being inserted betweentwo of the opposite. These fingers appear to be placed in four rowson each of the hands, and pass oflF from the head in a radiating di-rection, commencing at the column and uniting at the Pearce names the first species Pseudocrinites bifasciatus, and thesecond P. quadrifasciatus. On a Fossil Pine-forest at Kurrur-kurran, in the inlet ofAwaaba, on the eastern coast of Australia. By the Rev. W. , Awaaba is one of those inlets which occur at frequent intervalsalong the eastern coast of New South Wales, and which, from theirsea-entrance being usually narrow and blocked up with drifted sand,are by the colonists termed Lakes. Awaaba is called Lake Mac-. quarrie, and is the largest of the inlets of that description betweenPort Stephen and Broken Bay. Its sea-entrance lies fourteen milesto the south of the mouth of the Hunter river, nearly in 33° southlatitude. This inlet occupies a portion of that formation of conglomerate 60 Geological Society: the Rev. W. B. Clarke and sandstone, with subordinate beds of lignite, which extends fromthe Hunter river southwards towards Brisbane Water. The ligniteconstitutes the so-called Australian coal. This formation, owing toits beds along the shores of the inlet being placed horizontally, andbeing divided by nearly vertical joints, gives rise to regular lines ofcoast, both in a longitudinal and transverse direction. It formsalong the coast a high range, which, except at the entrance, dividesthe lake from the sea. Within the lake a series of extensive bays,bounded to the waters edge by steep cliffs, run out lik


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