SOOS OOOH SS D654 pa PHASCOLARCTOS CINEREUS. a eet Koala. Lipurus cinereus, Goldf. in Oken’s Isis, 1819, p. 271. 5 | Phascolarctos se Desm. Mammalogie, p. 276.—Ib. Dict. des Sci. Nat., tom. xxxix. p. 448.—Wallich in Jard. a Nat. Lib., Marsupialia, p. 295. |) _ ——— Flindersi, Less. Man. de Mamm., p. 221. 5 — fuscus et cinereus, Fisch. Syn. Mamm., p. 285.—Wagn. Schreb. Saugth., 111-112 Heft, p. 92. o ——— emereus, List of Mamm. in Coll. Brit. Mus., p. 87. 0 i Koala Wombat, Home, Phil. Trans. 1808, p. 304. a : Le Koala ou Colak, Desm. Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat., tom. xvii. p. 110. tab. E. 22. fig. 4. e Wombat of Flinders, Knox in Edinb. New Phil. Journ. 1826, p. 111. : 0 Phascolarctus cinereus, Waterh. Nat. Hist. of Mamm., vol. i. p. 259.—Gray, Ann. Phil. 1821. ee New Holland Sloth, Perry, Arcana, t. 5 Native Bear and Native Sloth of the Colonists. a Qo: o Q g 4 QO Durine my two years’ ramble in Australia, a portion of my time and attention was directed to the fauna X i of the dense and luxuriant brushes which stretch along the south-eastern coast, from Illawarra to Q | Moreton Bay. I also spent some time among the cedar brushes of the mountain ranges of the interior, particularly those bordering the well-known Liverpool Plains. In all these localities the Koala is to be 5 found, and although nowhere very abundant, a pair, with sometimes the addition of a single young one, wn may, if diligently sought for, be procured in every forest. It is very recluse in its habits, and, without the OOS aid of the natives, its presence among the thick foliage of the great Huwcalypt: can rarely be detected. During the daytime it is so slothful that it is very difficult to arouse and make it quit its resting-place. Those that p i fell to my own gun were most tenacious of life, clinging to the branches until the last spark had fled. However difficult it may be for the European to discover them in their shady retreats, the quick and practised eye of the aborigine readily detects them, and they speedily fall victims to the heavy and powerful clubs which are hurled at them with the utmost precision. These children of nature eat its flesh, after cooking —