979 
LEUCADENDRON argenteum. 
Cape Silver- Tree. 
4 
TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 
Nat. ord. Proteace.®. 
LEUCADENDRON. Supra, vol. b.fol. 402, 
Nux ventricosa, stylo toto calyceque persistentibus. 
L. argenteum; arboreum, foliis lanceolatis argenteis: marginibus ramisque 
villosis, bracteis involucrantibus abbreviatis tomentosis, calycibus mas- 
culis sericeis. Brown in Linn, trans. 10. 52. 
Scolymocephalos africana, foliis sericeis argenteis longis acutis. Herm cat. 
Conifera salicis facie folio et fructu tomento sericeo candicante obductis, 
semine pennato. Sloane in phil. trans. 17. p. 664. . 
Argyrodendros africana, foliis sericeis et argenteis. Comm. hort. Z. p. o 
t. 26. 
Protea, foliis lanceolatis integerrimis acutis hirsutis nitidis. Linn. hort. cliff. 
Thunb. diss. p. 48. Willd. sp.pl. 1. 
29, &c. 
Protea argentea. Linn. sp. pi. 137. 
529. Lam. ill. gen. t. 53. f. 1. . , 
L. argenteum. Burch, travels in Southern Africa, 1. p. 6 ., wi an u 
coloured figure of a branch in fruit. Spreng. sijst. 1. 
Long as this plant has been cultivated in gardens, it 
so rarely produces flowers under cultivation, that a coloure 
figure of it is now for the first time presented to the pu ic. 
Our drawing was made from fine specimens obliging } 
communicated to us by Mr. Miller, of Bristol, in June as 
Like Mr. Brown, we have not been so fortunate as to 
see the female inflorescence. The plant now figured was 
a male. 
At the Cape of Good Hope L. argenteum is of great 
importance for fire-wood. Its only native station in 
the Colony is “ the sloping ground at the foot ol the 
eastern side of Table Mountain,” where, and on the 
