181 



me in one of their comfortable guest-houses, where I 

 wrote up my notes and examined and dried out my 

 material. 



List of Material collected ox the Sarawaket Expedition. 



Herbs. 

 No. 



501 

 502 

 503 

 504 

 505 

 506 



507 

 508 

 509 

 510 

 5J1 

 512 

 513 

 515 

 516 



517 



518* 

 519* 

 520* 

 521 



522 

 523 



524* 

 525* 

 526 

 527 



528 



529 

 530 

 531 



532 



533 

 534 



535 

 536 



537 



538 

 539 



Styphelia 



Rhododendron 



Deschampsia 



Diplycosia 



Eurya . . 



Zoellera 



Libertia 



Poly podium 



Vernonia 



Rub us . . 



Rub us . . 



Rubus . . 



Bmchycome 



Pilea . . 



Schefflera 



Drapetes 



Phplorladus 

 Dacrydium 

 Libocedrus 

 Vaccinium 



Elatostemma 



Dawsonia 



Podocarpus 



Semecarpus 



Indet. . . 



Rhododendron 



Saumuja 



Indt. . . 

 I m pat tens 

 Rhododendron 



4 



Rhododendron 



Fagraea 



Metrosideros 



Med in el! n 



Medinella 



Em ilia 



Saurauja 



Elatostemma 



540 





541 

 542 

 543 

 544 



545 

 546 

 547 



548 

 549 

 550 



551 

 552* 

 553* 

 551 



556* 



55/ * 



558* 



559 * 



560 



561 



562 



563 



565 



566 



567* 



569 



570* 



571* 



572 



573* 



574* 



575 



576 



Pilea . . 



Elatostemna 

 Indt. . . 

 Impatiens 

 Sola n u m, 

 Piper . . 

 Schefflera 

 Cyholophus 



Indt. . . 

 Gleichenia 



Da) n nur op-sis 

 Muhlenbeckia 



Podocarpus 



Indt. . . 

 Podocarpus 



Indt. . . 



Himantandra 



Calophyllum 



Ka nia 

 Indt. . . 

 Indt. . . 

 Dodonea 

 Oenanihe 



Gnetum 

 Mussaenda 



Hoya . . 



Dacrydium 



Cyrtandra 



Quercus 



Alstonia 

 Dick rot rich urn 



Celtis . . 

 Indt. . . 

 A gapetes 

 Ho mala nth us 



« • 



« 9 



• • 



• • 



• • 



sp. ? 



communae Forster 

 caespitosa Beauv. 

 mundulaia Fv.M. 

 sp. nov. 



procumbens Warbg 

 pulchella Spreng. 



sp, 



affin. I 

 sp ? 

 sp 

 sp, 

 sp 



sp. nov. 

 setulosa 



• • 



rborea 



9 9 



? 



. . 



• • 





Harms. 



affin. 



ericoide< Hook F. 



h ypoph y 11 us Hook. 



sp. 



papuana F.v.M. . . 



blepharocalyx 



Schlecter 



sp 

 sp 

 sp 

 sp 





• • 



• • 



carringtona e F.v.M. 

 Roemeri Laut. 



affi n . 



• • 



sp. ? . . 



Hansemanni, Sch. 



\\ arb. 

 Warianum Schlec- 



tor 

 oborata, affin, 

 sp. nov. 

 sp 

 sp. 



prenatithoidea /).c, 



conferta Warbg. . . 

 macrophyV um 

 Brong var. majus- 



c ulum K. Sch. 

 pellis-crocodili H. 



Winkl. 

 .sexquifolium Hask. 



* • 



aviculare Foist. . . 



• • 



sp. 



sp. 

 pachycarpus 



Winkl. 



H. 



dich'jtoma Hook. 



Kingiana Warb. 



platyclada Mciss. 

 a mar a Bin me. . 



• ■ • 



cupressina R. Br. 



• • • 



Belgrareana SchL 



sp. 



eugenioides Schl. 



9 • 



vise os a 

 Schlechteri \\ olrT. 



gnemon affin. 

 frondosa Linn. 

 sp. nov. 

 datum Wall 



sp. 



Junghvhuni 



macrophyUa 

 Chalmersii F 



.M 



sp ! 



• • 



Moorhousiana 



populifolius (.rah. 



Family 



o 



■s 



Epacridaceae 



Ericaceae 



Graminae 



Ericaceae 



Theaceae 



Boraginacea 

 Indaceae 



Polypodaceae 



Compos itae 



Rosaceae 



Rosaceae 



Rosaceae 

 Compositae 



Urticaceae 

 Arali aceae 



Thymelaeaceae 

 Coniferae 

 Coniferae 

 Con i ferae 

 Ericaceae 



Urticaceae 

 Musci 

 Coniferae 

 Anacardiaceae 



Orch idaceae 



Ericaceae 



Dillcniaceae 



Orch idaceae 

 Balsa niaceae 

 Ericaceae 



Ericaceae 



Loganiaceae 



Myrtacvae 



Melaxiancceae 



M elastanaccae 



Combretaceae 



Dillcniaceae 



Urticaceae 



Urticaceae 



Urticaceae 



Umbelliferae 



BaUamaceae 



Solanaceae 



Pi per aceae 



Araleaceae 



1 'rticaceae 



i 



Celasfrinae ? 

 Gle > c hen i aceae 



Moraceae 

 Polygon aceae 



Coniferae 



Indet. 

 Coniferae 



Indet. 



Magnoliaceae 



Gutti ferae 



Saxifragaceae 



Indet, 



Bur set -aceae 



Sap'aalaceae 



Umbelliferae 



Gnetaceae 



Rubiaceae 

 [sslepiadaceae 



Coniferae 

 G> ^neriaceae 



Fagaceae 

 Apocynaceae 

 Gcsiii t aceae 

 I J lmaeeae 



J.auraci ne 



Ericaceae 



E < i ph o rbiateae 



.. 



List of Material collected on Sarawaket Expedition — continued. 





Herbs. 

 No. 



Genus 



Family 



577 



578* 

 579* 

 580 



581* 



582* 



583* 

 584 



585* 

 586* 

 587* 



588* 



Bh'niea 

 Indt. . . 



Eugenia 

 Schui inansia 

 A honindes 

 Quercus 



Indt. . . 



Garcinia 



(Juercus 



Pometia 



Pterocarpus 



Afzelia. . 



9 • 



chtnensis D.C. 



• • 



• • 



sp. 



Ilenningsii K. Sch. 

 pulchra Schltr. . . 

 spicata var. de- 

 pressa King 



sp. 



lamponga Miq. 



pinnata Forst. 

 in die us Willd. 



V • 



bijuga A. Gray 



• ■ 



• • 



( 'om pos itae 



Indt. 



21 yrlaceae 



Ochnaceae 

 Fla eoca rpaceae 



Fagaceae 



Indt. 



Gutti ferae 



Fagaceae 



Sapiudaceae 



Leguminosae 



Leguminosae 



gathered 



Those marked with an asterisk are large forest trees. 

 It will be seen that the material contains a great num- 

 ber of non-arboreal and shrub species. I 

 material of them, because I thought that they would 

 have a botanic interest, for these parts are so rarely 

 visited by persons equipped fcr collecting and drying 

 leaf and flower specimens. So on the high mountains 

 I collected anything that I saw in flower. Some of 

 the material has not been fully determined; that is no 

 fault of Mr. White or his able assistant, Mr. Francis, 

 but is due to incomplete material. The conifers are, 



it will be seen, well represented, time being no less 



than seven different specimens, not counting the two 

 large Axnicarift, material of which I did not gather. 



The range is wide, for genera of t he Philippi 

 Queensland, of Tasmania, and of New Zealand are 

 represented among these conifers. 



nes, of 



Field notes 



describing 



the appearance and macro- 

 scopic details of the woods will be found in Section C 

 of the report. 



Gkook \riiKAL Data. 



SattleluTg 



3,240 feet 





Ogeramnaim 



5,851 fee 



Bolingbangeng . • 



3,522 



99 





Hrid.L'r of hulling 2,878 



>* 



Nandno 



8,140 



99 





Kudimgeng Ca 



mp 0,O7h' 



f 



Janzain (a) 



4,493 



>y 





Camp on M 



i >ssv 





Jnangey (b) 



4,240 



*> 





Forest 



. . S.727 



9* 



Divide on road be- 









l^usu Camp 



. . 8.550 



99 



tween (a) and (b) 



4,958 



>> 





Top ('amp 



.. 11,752 



>> 



9 W 



Bridge over Mongi 



1,679 



>* 





South Crest 



of 





Knlintufu 



5;\\\\ 



m 





Sarawaket 



.. \'2JS[ 



-> 



Bridge over Kuak 



1 



2,494 



m 





North Crest 



of 





Tobu 



4,449 



** 





Sarawaket 



.. 13,454 



>* 



Divide of Kuak 















and Bulling . . 



6,761 



M 















Lonj 



;iti 



ide. 



L.ititiidc. 





Sarawaket 



■ • 



147^ I 



V 



28" 



6° 2o' rr 





Ogeramnai 



« ■• 



147° 5 



* 



IT 



46* 



fr 2S' 8" 





X6. 



APPENDIX III. 

 Expedition to the Bismarck Rxxge from 3.1 



This expedition ended rather badly, and I lost my 

 herbarium assistant, all my specimens, and a very large 

 portion of my notes, including my diary covering the 

 early part of the journey from Siephanshort to the 

 Ramu. The next diary opens on the 6th February at 

 " Swamp Camp," a mile from the Ramu, and so I can 

 but briefly describe from memory the four days previous, 

 during which I traversed the intermediate or coastal 

 range and dropped down to the plains of the Ramu. 



A glance at the map will show that the shortest 

 route from the coast to the Upper Ramu and Bismarck 

 is from the old German Government head-quarters of 

 Stephanshort. Captain Tutton, A. D.C, Madang, had 

 travelled from the Ramu to the coast, so I decided to 

 fellow his iiail back and across the river, and so reach 



tin Rismarcks. 



]\Iy object was to so traverse the country from sea 

 level to the highest possible j>oint as to embrace as wide 



v- 



ge of forest regions as possible. 



