Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-5g6vh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T18:29:53.770Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Upper Devonian Fishes of Victoria, Australia, and their Bearing on the Stratigraphy of the State

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Edwin Sherbon Hills
Affiliation:
1851 Research Scholar at the Royal College of Science,London

Extract

The recent discovery of fossil fishes in the Devonian rocks of Victoria may appear somewhat surprising in view of the fact that the general geology of the state has by now been worked out in fair detail, both by the Geological Survey and by independent investigators. Much of the detailed work has been confined, however, to the Lower Palaeozoic groups, in which the original gold deposits of the state are found, the economically less important Upper Palaeozoic rocks having been subjected to less minute examination by the Survey, especially of late years, and left in the hands of individual geologists, who often turned to the great igneous rock masses occurring in the central part of the state as constituting a congenial subject for research.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1931

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. Benson, W. N., 1922. “Materials for the Study of the Devonian Palaeontology of Australia”: Rec. Geol. Surv. N.S. Wales, x (2), 84204.Google Scholar
2. Chapman, F., 1907. Appendix to “ Physiographical and Geological Notes on the Mt. Wellington District, North Gippsland ”, by E. O. Theile, Vic. Nat., xxiv, 2335.Google Scholar
3. Chapman, F., 1917. “On the Occurrence of Fish Remains and a Lingula in the Grampians, Western Victoria”: Rec. Geol. Surv. Vic., iv (1), 83–6.Google Scholar
4. Dun, W. S., 1897. “On the Occurrence of Devonian Plant-bearing Beds on the Genoa River, Country of Auckland”: Rec. Geol. Surv. N.S. Wales, v (3), 117–23.Google Scholar
5. Eichwald, E., 1840. “Die Thier-und Pflanzenreste des alten rothen Sandsteins und Bergkalks in Novogrodschen Gouvernement”: Bull. Sci. Acad. Imp. des Sci. St. Petersbourg, vii, 7891.Google Scholar
6. Gregory, J. W., 1902. “The Geology of Mount Macedon, Victoria”: Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xiv (2), 185217.Google Scholar
7. Heintz, A., 1929. “Die Downtonischen und Devonischen Vertebraten von Spitzbergen. Acanthaspida”: Skrifter om Svalbard og Ishavet., Nr. 22 and Nachtrag Nr. 23.Google Scholar
8. Hills, E. S., 1929. “The Geology and Palaeontography of the Cathedral Range and the Blue Hills, in the North-Western Gippsland”: Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xli (2), 177201.Google Scholar
9. Howitt, A. W., 1875. “Notes on the Geology of Part of the Mitchell River Division of the Gippsland Mining District”: Geol. Surv. Vic., Rept. Prog., No. 2, 5973.Google Scholar
10. Howitt, A. W., 1876. “Notes on the Devonian Rocks of North GippslandGeol. Surv. Vic., Rept. Prog., No. 3, 181249.Google Scholar
11. Howitt, A. W., 1877. “Notes on the Geology of Part of the Mitchell River Division of the Mining District of Gippsland”: Rec. Geol. Surv. Vic., Rept. Prog., No. 4, 118–26.Google Scholar
12. Howitt, A. W., 1890. “Notes on the Rocks occurring between Limestone River and Mount Leinster”: Mines Dept., Vic., Rept., 1890, 30–3.Google Scholar
13. Hussakof, L., 1911. “Notes on Devonic Fishes from Scaumenac Bay, Quebec”: New York State Mus., Rept. No. 65 (1).Google Scholar
14. Junner, N. R., 1915. “The Petrology of the Igneous Rocks near Healesville and Narbethong”: Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xxvii, (2), 261–84.Google Scholar
15. Kiaer, J., 1915. “Upper Devonian Fish Remains from Ellesmere Land with Remarks on Drepanaspis”: Rept. 2nd Norwegian Arctic Expedition in the “ Fram ”, 1898–1902, iv (33).Google Scholar
16. Kiaer, J., 1926. “A Bothriolepis Fauna from Arkhangel Bay, Novaya Zemlya, 1921. No. 32”: Norske Videnskaps-Akad. i Oslo.Google Scholar
17. McCoy, F., 1874. Prodromus of the Palaeontology of Victoria, Decade I, 37–9.Google Scholar
18. McCoy, F., 1875. Report. [On Fossil Plants from Iguana Creek.] Geol. Surv. Vic., Rept. Prog., No. 2, 72–3.Google Scholar
19. McCoy, F., 1876. Prodomus of the Palaeontology of Victoria, Decade IV, 21–3.Google Scholar
20. McCoy, F., 1889. “Report on Palaeontology for the year 1889”: Ann. Rept. Soc. Mines, 23–4.Google Scholar
21. Murray, R. A. F., 1878. Geological Sketch-map, Sheet No. 2, South-east Gippsland. Geol. Surv. Vic., Rept. Prog., No. 5, 4470.Google Scholar
22. Sedgwick, A., and Murchison, R. I., 1835. “On the Structure and Relations of the Deposits contained between the Primary Rocks and the Oolitic Series in the North of ScotlandTrans. Geol. Soc. 2, iii, 126–60.Google Scholar
23. Patten, W., 1912. The Evolution of the Vertebrates and their Kin. London: John Churchill.Google Scholar
24. Selwyn, A. R. C., and Ulrich, G. H. F., 1866. Notes on the Physical Geography, Geology, and Mineralogy of Victoria. Intercolonial Exhibition Essays.Google Scholar
25. Skeats, E. W., 1923. “The Evidence of Post-Lower Carboniferous Plutonic and Hypabyssal Intrusions into the Grampian Sandstones of Western Victoria”: Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xxxvi (1), 50–7.Google Scholar
26. Skeats, E. W., 1929. “The Devonian and Older Palaeozoic Rocks of the Tabberabbera District, North Gippsland, Victoria”: Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xli (2), 97120.Google Scholar
27. Stensio, E. A., 1927. “The Downtonian and Devonian Vertebrates of Spitzbergen”: Skrifter om Svalbard og Nordishavel.Google Scholar
28. Summers, H. S., 1908. “Geology of the Proposed Nillahcootie Water Conservation Area”: Proc., Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xxi (2), 285301.Google Scholar
29. Summers, H. S., 1914. “On the Origin and Relationship of Some Victorian Igneous Rocks”: Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xxvi, (2), 256–97.Google Scholar
30. Summers, H. S., 1923. “The Relationship between Dacite and Granodiorite in Victoria”: Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xxxv (2), 134–8.Google Scholar
31. Teale, E. O., 1920. “A Contribution to the Palaeozoic Geology of Victoria, with special reference to the Districts of Mt. Wellington and Nowa Nowa, respectively”; Proc. Roy. Soc. Vic., N.S., xxxii (2), 67146.Google Scholar
32. Thiele, E. O., 1907. “Physiographical and Geological Notes on the Mount Wellington District, North Gippsland”: Vic. Nat., xxiv (2), 2335.Google Scholar
33. Traquair, R. H., 1896. “The Extinct Vertebrata of the Moray Firth Area”: In J. Harvie-Brown and T. E. Buckley's Vertebrate Fauna of the Moray Basin, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
34. Traquair, R. H., 1913. The Fishes of the Old Red Sandstone of Britain, Part 2, Pal. Soc., lxvii.Google Scholar
35. Woodward, A. S., 1906. “The Study of Fossil Fishes”: Proc. Geol. Assoc., xix, 266–82.Google Scholar
36. Woodward, A. S., 1920. Presidential Address, Linn. Soc. Zool. Lond.Google Scholar