372 ON THE FLORA OF MT. WILSON. 



There are thus 77 JSTatural Orders, 257 genera, and 545 species. 



On tabulating the above species (Mt. Wilson plants only) it 

 Avill be found that the ferns have 18 genera and 61 species; the 

 ■Orchideae 20 genera and 58 species. These Natural Orders, how- 

 ever, on account of their attractiveness, have probably been most 

 assiduously collected. Next come the Leguminosas with 15 genera, 

 52 species; Proteaceaj, 11 genera, 38 species; Myrtaceie, 10 and 30; 

 Liliacese, 12 and 25; Epacrideje, 11 and 22; and a few of the 

 remaining orders have over 10 species. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



1. CcTN.viNGHAM, A.— Hooker's Journal of Botany. Vol. iv. 1842, p. 280. 



2. Du Faitr, E.— Railway Guide of N.S.W. Ed. 1881, p. 59. 



■3. Russell, H. C. — Results of Rain and River Observations made in 

 N.S.W. 



4. SuTTOK, W. H.— "A Visit to Mount Wilson," in Australian Stories 



retold, and Sketches of Country Life (p. 171), Bathurst, 1887. 



5. Trebeck, p. N.— Mt. Wilson and its Ferns. P.L.S.N.S.W. 1886 (2), 



Vol. i. p. 491. 



€. Wilkinson, C. S. — Mines and Mineral Statistics of N.S.W., 1876, p. 

 136. 



7. Notes on trie Geology of N.S.W., p. 62. 



8. Woolls, W. — A Contribution to the Flora of Australia, 1867, p. 173. 



9. A Glance at the Flora of Mt. Wilson. P.L.S.N.S.W. 



1887 (2), Vol. ii.p. 6. 



