Plate 48:
Figures 1, 2, and 3: Fossil remains
of A new species of Hypsiprymnus.
Figures 4, 5, and 6: Of Phascolomys
mitchellii.
Figure 7: A section of the
teeth of the same fossil species
of wombat.
From Nature and on Zinc by Major T.L. Mitchell.
Day & Haghe Lithographers
to the Queen.
London, Published by T. & W. Boone.
Plate 49:
Figures 1 and 2: Fossil remains
of the Diprotodon.
Figures 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7: Fossil
remains of the Dasyurus laniarius.
Plate 50: Marks of subsidence
in an inner portion of the
breccia cavern.
Major T.L. Mitchell del. Scherf Lith.
J. Graf Printer to Her Majesty.
Published by T. & W. Boone, London.
Plate 51:
Figure 1: Fossil remains of
the radius and ulna of A kangaroo.
Figure 2: Of the foot of
A dasyurus.
Figures 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11:
Various teeth of animals
unknown.
All these drawings being of
the natural size.
Figures 12 and 13, represent, on
A reduced scale, the large bone
which M.
Cuvier supposed to have belonged
to A young Elephant.
Rocks in Bass Strait: 1. Pyramid rock bearing east distant 3 miles. 2. Rock of granite bearing east by north.
...
(Appendix 2.1.
Vocabulary of words having the
same meaning in different parts
of
Australia.
APPENDIX 2.2.
Meteorological journal kept during
the journey into the interior
of new
south Wales in 1836.)
APPENDIX 2.3.
Extract from the Sydney Herald of may 21, 1838.
APPENDIX 2.4.
An account of the number
of pounds of wool imported
from new south Wales
and from Van Diemen’s land
from 1820 to 1837, distinguishing each
year.