40 AUSTRALIAN PLANTS. 



A remarkable plant ; in the form of the leaves not dissimilar to T, 

 bifidum ; in the arrangement of the flowers and fruit, however, resem- 

 bling Pomaderris elliptica, 



51. Trymalium hifidum^ F. Muell. ; branchlets velutino-tomentosc ; 

 leaves nearly herbaceous, linear, cuneate, forked, with revolute, entire 

 margins, above glabrous or scantily tomentose, beneath densely silky- 

 tomentose, the notch not apiculate; stipules almost lanceolate] flowers 

 in dense glomerules, together with the floral leaves pale grey, tomen- 

 tose; petals entire; style short, undivided. 



Hab. In the Marble Eanges, and on the coast of Spencer's Gulf, at 

 Boston Point, C. Wilhelmi, 



It may possibly be a variety of the following species. 



53. Trymalium ^a?/?2ff^w?7?2?^?«5 F, Muell; branches tomentose 3 leaves 



herbaceous, wedge-shaped or ovate-truncate, retuse or bilobed, with 

 flat or recurved margins, above thinly^ clothed with a partially starry 



tomentum, beneath densely tomentose, floral leaves nearly round or ovate, 

 entire or bilobed, the upper surface as well as the flowers covered with 



a pale grey tomentum ; stipules ovate-lanceolate ; flowers in dense glomc- 

 rules ; petals entire ; style simple. 



Hab, On sandy ridges of Kangaroo Island and Encounter Bay. 

 ■ 53. Trymalium spatMlatum, F. Muell. ; branchlets silky; leaves 

 nearly coriaceous, obovate-spathulate, gradually tapering towards the 

 base, almost sessile, with slightly reflexed margin, rounded or truncate 

 at the summit, terminated by a short, reflexed point; those of the 

 branches perfectly glabrous and even above, yellowish-grey silky be- 

 neath; the floral leaves. grey-velutinous above; stipules linear-lanceo- 

 late or subulate, glomerules disposed in a dense panicle, when fruit- 

 bearing clammy ; petals entire ; style short, undivided ; carpels inde- 

 hiscent. 



Hab. On the stony ranges near Mount Lofty, in South Australia, 

 and in Kangaroo Island. 



TrymaUim ohovatiim (Hook. Bot. Mag- p. 277) differs from this in 

 having distinctly petiolate leaves, which are clothed with a velvet iu- 

 dument beneath, and in its larger flowers. 



54. Trj^malium subochreatum^ F. Muell. ; branchlets velutinous ; 

 leaves nearly coriaceous, oblong-linear, almost blunt, with revolute 

 margins, above scabrous or scantily velutinous, beneath densely vel- 

 vety ; stipules lanceolate-ovate, large ; flowers cymose, glomerate, with 



