PLANTS OF VAN DIEMAN’S LAND. 255 
but much smaller in all its parts and the leaves are con- 
stantly retuse. On the under side, some of the scales are 
larger and darker coloured than the rest, and thus occasion a 
spotted appearance. 
2. P. montanum, n. sp. ; foliis teretibus punctato-glandu- 
losis obtusis basi angustioribus supra linea exarata, pedun- 
culis brevissimis unifloris in axillis foliorum supremorum. . 
Mr. Lawrence, (n. 321.) : on the western mountains at an 
elevation of 3500 feet above the level of thesea. Mr. Gunn, 
(n. 293.) —' The flowers quite agree with the Genus Pheba- - 
lium, as given by Adr. de Jussieu, and the habit is so very 
much that of P. diosmeum, Ad. de Juss. (P. phylicoides, 
Sieb. Herb, Nov. Holl. n. 110.) that it may naturally rank 
next to it: still our plant has none of the silvery scales of 
the majority of species of Phebalium, nor the pubescence of 
the species just mentioned. It is quite glabrous in every 
part. The back of the leaves too is convex, the upper side 
furrowed. Calyx 5-cleft, with a bractea at its base. Petals 
obovato-lanceolate. Stamens 10, inserted at the base of a 
rather short fleshy torus: filaments filiform, longer than the 
petals: anthers subglobose. Ovary of 5 oblong obtuse lobes, 
glandular: style about equal to them in length. Stigma 
capitate. 
- 1. Boronia hyssopifolia. Sieb. Herb. Nov. Holl, n. 296. 
- Mr. Lawrence, (1831.) : 
2. B. pilosa. Labill. Nov. Holl. v. i. t. 124. De Cand. 
Prodr. v. i. p. T21. 
Mr. Lawrence, (1831.) Mr. Gunn, (n. 151.) 
3. B. variabilis, n. sp.; foliis uni-bijugis glaberrimis cras- 
siusculis, foliolis oblongo-spathulatis acutiusculis, peduncu- 
lis axillaribus 1—3-floris folio brevioribus, floribus 8-andris. 
—«. ramis glabris, foliis impunctatis.—£. ramis pubescenti- 
hirtis, foliis impresso-glanduloso-punctatis.—7. ramis sub- 
pubescentibus, foliis eglandulosis. 
Mr. Lawrence, (1831.) Mr. Gunn, (n. 8.)—8. Mr. Gunn, 
(n. 214).—7. Mr. Gunn, (n. 303.), who observes that it is 
called Lemon-plant. 
