AUSTRALIAN PLANTS. G? 



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downy ; leaves crowded, coriaceous, perforated by oil-glands, linear or 

 oblong-lanceolate, acute, one-nerved ; flowers white, axillary, solitary, 

 stalked, crowded below the summit of the branches or formino: termi- 

 nal corymbs; bracts downy, lanceolate-linear^ deciduous; petals twice 

 as long as the deltoid segments of the calyx and half as long as the 

 stamens; capsule with three, four, or five cells, immersed in the dry 

 campanulate calyx ; ripe seeds hardly shining, reticulate. 



Hab. At the foot of the Australian Alps, on the banks of rivers and 



rivulets. 



ifolia 



nearly campanulate, its stalk sometimes of thrice the length of the 



^^^ r 



calyx. 



■m 



ceolate-linear or oblong-lanceolate, acutish, awnless, with flat, perfectly 

 entire margin; peduncles generally three-flowered. 



Hab. On the banks of the Tambo, on the Snowy Eiver, and on 

 several of its tributaries. 



79. Campbyrorayrtus crenulala.f T. Muell.; leaves spreading, ovate 

 or obovate-oblong, blunt, with flat, densely and unequally crenulated 

 margin ; peduncles one- to three-flowered. 



Hab. On springs and rivulets of the Buffalo Ranges. 



80. Leptospermum hrevipes^ F. Muell.; branchlets glabrous or in a 

 young state somewhat silky ; leaves flat, oblong-lanceolate, very short- 

 pointed, glabrous, three-nerved, full of oil-dots; flowers solitary or 

 twin, axillary or on very short branchlets, terminal; pedicels and ca- 

 lyces grey, silky-pubescent, the former as long or longer than the 

 latter ; lobes of the calyx pubescent, persistent, lanceolate ; capsule 



depressed, five-celled. 



Hab. Generally a companion of Kunzea pedunculuris^ to which it 

 bears more resemblance in habit than to any of its congeners, being 

 quite anomalous in producing very conspicuous flower-stalks. It ranks 

 nearest to Z. divaricatum. 



81. Lhotzkya genetJiylloides, P. Muell.; flowers terminal, nearly ca- 

 pitate ; leaves crowded, exstipidate, spreading, petiolate, without sti- 

 pules, tetragonal, at length above flattening, subobtuse, as well as the 



* Thi3 is Harmogia virgata, Schaaer. — En. 



t Agrees better with the generic character of Ilarmogia than that of Camph 



TO- 



mg, 



