Abstract
Have been favoured by E dward H ill, Esq., of Sydney, New South Wales, through the kind offices of his brother-in-law Sir D aniel Cooper, Bart., with a small collection of fossil remains from that part of the freshwater deposits of Darling Downs through which the river Condamine has cut its bed. Among these fossils were parts of a broken skull, at once recognizable, by its carnassial teeth, as belonging to the same large carnivorous marsupial as afforded the subject of Part I. of the present series of papers.