Dr. Smirn’s Characters of three new Species of Boronia. 283 
racter. These three new species, moreover, differ so much among 
themselves, as well as from the other four, in the form of this 
leaves, and yet the whole seven have so general a conformity in 
those organs in some respects, that the most elegant specific cha- 
racters, as well as specific names, are easily deduced. from 
thence. 
It will be best to exhibit the characters of the whole at one 
view, in order to show how they differ, as well as to make some 
slight corrections in those species already published. 
/ * Foliis compositis. — 
1. BORONIA. pinnata, foliis impari-pinnatis. integerrimis gla- 
bris, pedunculis axillaribus dichotemis, filamentis apice obtusis 
glandulosis. Tracts, t. 4. Andrews, t. 58. Venten. Malmais. t. 38, 
Gathered near Port Jackson, by Dr. White. k. . , 
2, Bononra alata, foliis impari-pinnatis crenatis: rachi- git 
så, pedunculis dichotomis, filamentis iiem antheris subter- 
minalibus. 
Discovered at King George's Sound, on the west coast of 
New Holland, latitude 35°, by Mr. Archibald Menzies, F.L.S.». 
This appears by the dried specimens to be a larger and some- 
what more handsome shrub than even the preceding. It differs 
in having hairs on the ie branches, as well as on the common foot- 
stalk of the leaves underneath, particularly at the joints. That 
part is also much more winged. ‘The leaflets, mostly five pair, are 
broad, elliptical, revolute and crenate, hairy at the back of the 
nerve. Bunches of flowers nearly terminal, hairy, with fringed - 
bracteæ. Flowers larger than in B. pinnata; their petals whitish 
. on the upper side. Filaments fringed all the way up, each ter- — 
minating in a round knob, nearly on the top of which stands the ! 
sender capillary stalk bearing the anthere. Ea te 
202 ** Foliis 
