lts flowers usually appear in threes; butin Mr. Harrison's 
specimens they were solitary; in other respects thev quite 
agreed with a wild specimen collected by Mr. Allan Cun- 
ningham and given me by Dr. Hooker. 
To Mr. Cunningham I am indebted for the following 
information respecting this species, and for specimens of 
it and the undermentioned, which were long sinee collected 
by him in his various expeditions of discovery in New 
Holland. 
“T. macrophylla is a tree 50-60 feet high, affording, by means of 
its ample foliage, a pleasant, agreeable shade, on the sandy southern 
shores of Moreton Bay, New South Wales (Lat. 27º. 30. s.) where it 
was first observed, bearing flowers and fruit, in Sept. 1824. It is 
nearly allied to T. conferta, R. Br. but the segments of the calyx are 
smaller.” 
T. suaveolens ; arborea, foliis oblongo-lanceolatis alternis glabris, 
petiolis calycibusque pubescentibus, laciniis calycis ovatis brevibus 
acutis, phalangibus polyandris. 
“ T. suaveolens Smith in Rees—Melaleuca suaveolens Gertn. 
** A tree of irregular growth 15-20 feet high, frequent in damp 
rocky places, margins of gullies, &e.; Endeavour River, 1770, Sir 
Jos. Banks; J uly 1829, N. E. Coast, New South Wales, A. C." 
T. umbrosa, A. C.; arborea, foliis oblongis mucronatis oppositis gla- 
berrimis opacis, fruetibus globosis superis glaberrimis. 
“ Twenty-five to thirty feet high, in dark shady woods, on the 
shores of York Sound, N. W. Coast of Australia, 16th Sept. 1820; 
third Voyage of H. M. Cutter Mermaid, Capt. King. Rare.” 
T. depressa, A. C. (D. C. prodr. 3. 210); glaberrima, caule fru- 
ticoso, foliis subverticillatis angusto-oblongis, fructibus solitariis om- 
ninò inferis, 
“A low shrubby plant, on barren, stony hills; islands of Repulse 
Bay of Cook, New South Wales, tropie (Lat. 20°. 35. s.) June 8, 
1829,” 
