BY HENRY DEANE AND J. H. MAIDEN. 627 



differences. Coolibali is more a fibrous-barked tree than is 

 usually imderstood by the term "Box." The differences between 

 the two species were well known to the blacks, and it is a matter 

 for regret that the average denizen of the interior has not 

 acquired the information. 



E. .^[aideni, F.v.M. 



This species approaches E. globulus, and some botanists desirous 

 of consolidating species might be inclined to look upon it as an 

 extreme form of the latter. Luehmann's remarks, at p. 534, Vol. 

 vii. Report Atist. Assoc. Adv. Science, are interesting in this con- 

 nection. The true E. globuhos is very rare in New South Wales, 

 being confined to situations at no great distance from the Vic- 

 torian border. We have seen in the National Herbarium at 

 Melbourne specimens from Ovens River, Victoria; Granite Creek, 

 Gippsland; and Nowa Nowa, an arm of Lake T^'ers, Gippsland 

 (A. W. Howitt), which are all identical, or nearly so, with 

 typical E. Maideni, F.v.M. Other localities for this species in 

 New South Wales are "Sources of stream leading to Merimbula" 

 (Howitt), Wilson's Promontory, Mt. Dromedary (Miss Bate), 

 Walcha district (the special localities referred to at p. 357, Agric. 

 Gazette, N.S.W., for 1S98, as E. glohidus), Nulla Mountain, 

 (Mudgee district). 



E. GONIOCALYX, F.V.^I. 



This species has been found by Mr. W. Forsyth in the Warrum- 

 bungle Ranges (summit of Mt. Bulaway, 3450 feet), which locality 

 pushes its range considerably to the westward. Fruits scarcely 

 angled. 



Mr. R. H. Cambage points out that in districts (Burraga, 

 Rockley, Ac.) where this species is known to some as " Bundy," 

 it is confused by others with " Apple " {E. Stuartiana). Bundy 

 occurs on the ridges; Apple follows the valleys, and is also found 

 on flat basalt tops. At Burraga it is considered the best furnace 

 wood for copper smelting. 



