This paper completes the examination, undertaken last year, of a series of fossil plants from the Mesozoic Rocks of Tasmania. In addition to the collections of the Tasmanian Museum and Geological Survey, I have also had the opportunity of examining a small collection from Mt. Nicholas, presented by Mr. Alex Montgomery to the Geological Survey of New South Wales. This list of thirty-three species indicates the extent to which the Tasmanian Mesozoic flora is now known, and compares favourably, as regards number of known species, with any of the floras of Mesozoic age in Australia
The material for this third unpretensive addition to the literature on Tasmanian plants has gradual...
The first thing that strikes the student of botany when he observes the more conspicuous vegetable ...
It had hitherto been generally believed that the gigantic marsupials were restricted to the contine...
The second of this series of contributions to the our history of Fossil Flora refers largely to coll...
Of the numerous paradoxical plants whicli characterize the Flora of Australia to such a great exten...
In the early part of November 1890 my attention was directed, by a letter from Mr. L. Rodway, of Ho...
Mr. R. M. Johnston, in Proc. Roy. Soc, Tasmania, 1880, p. 31,gives a list of Table Cape fossils, wh...
These fossils came to us from the Launceston Tertiary Basin formations at Harland's Rise, Evandale....
Thirty years ago (P.Z.S. 1900, pp. 776-794) Sir Baldwin Spencer described and named the fossil Mars...
H. H. SCOTT, Curator of Queen Victoria Museum, Launceston, Clive Lord F.L.S., Director of the Tasma...
Section 1. The history of the genus Nototherium. In the middle of last century the first fossil re...
These notes clear up an apparent contradiction between the writings Qf Lydekker (1889) and De Vis (...
It will be understood from the previous papers that the the Mosses of this and the neighbouring col...
The 47th volume of the Imperial Academy of Science, Vienna, issued this year, contains an important...
In continuing the subject opened by me in the proceedings for 1893, I desire to acknowledge my furt...
The material for this third unpretensive addition to the literature on Tasmanian plants has gradual...
The first thing that strikes the student of botany when he observes the more conspicuous vegetable ...
It had hitherto been generally believed that the gigantic marsupials were restricted to the contine...
The second of this series of contributions to the our history of Fossil Flora refers largely to coll...
Of the numerous paradoxical plants whicli characterize the Flora of Australia to such a great exten...
In the early part of November 1890 my attention was directed, by a letter from Mr. L. Rodway, of Ho...
Mr. R. M. Johnston, in Proc. Roy. Soc, Tasmania, 1880, p. 31,gives a list of Table Cape fossils, wh...
These fossils came to us from the Launceston Tertiary Basin formations at Harland's Rise, Evandale....
Thirty years ago (P.Z.S. 1900, pp. 776-794) Sir Baldwin Spencer described and named the fossil Mars...
H. H. SCOTT, Curator of Queen Victoria Museum, Launceston, Clive Lord F.L.S., Director of the Tasma...
Section 1. The history of the genus Nototherium. In the middle of last century the first fossil re...
These notes clear up an apparent contradiction between the writings Qf Lydekker (1889) and De Vis (...
It will be understood from the previous papers that the the Mosses of this and the neighbouring col...
The 47th volume of the Imperial Academy of Science, Vienna, issued this year, contains an important...
In continuing the subject opened by me in the proceedings for 1893, I desire to acknowledge my furt...
The material for this third unpretensive addition to the literature on Tasmanian plants has gradual...
The first thing that strikes the student of botany when he observes the more conspicuous vegetable ...
It had hitherto been generally believed that the gigantic marsupials were restricted to the contine...