_ where it grows amongst the scoriz of the crater at 10,000— 
11,000 ft. elevation. The specimen of OC. Noezliana here 
figured was purchased at an auction sale in London, and 
flowered in a cool house of the Royal Gardens in July, 
1895. 
Descr.—Pseudobulbs clustered, one and a half inch long, 
oblong, compressed, dark blueish green, wrinkled. Leaf 
solitary, three to four inches long by nearly one broad, 
linear-oblong, narrowed at the base, but not petioled, 
obtuse, dorsally keeled, bright green above, paler beneath. 
Scape six inches long or more, slender, inclined, purplish 
green, with many lanceolate sheaths about half an inch 
long. aceme six inches long, inclined or drooping, loosely 
many-fid.; bracts lanceolate, not half the length of the 
pedicels, which are half to three-fourths of an inch long. 
Flowers an inch and a quarter in diameter, dark rose-red, 
suffused -with golden-yellow on the tip. Sepals free, 
broadly ovate, dorsal erect, lateral recurved, almost revo- 
lute. Petals narrower, oblanceolate, spreading. Lip 
shorter than the sepals; claw adnate to the column, limb 
deflexed, lateral lobes rounded, recurved, midlobe obcor- 
date; disk with two parallel linear-oblong golden-yellow 
calli. Column elongate, arched; clinandrium broad, girt 
with a narrow 3-lobed crest or wing. Anther hemi- 
spheric.—J. D. H. 
Fig. 1, Front view of column and lip; 2, back view of do.; anther; 4and 
5, pollinia :—All enlarged. 
