BY J. H. MAIDEN AVD K. iSK/l'OHK. 251 



Australian specimens, kindly presented to the 8\-dney Herbarium 

 by Mr. J. M. Black, are much more flaccid and have a dift'ereni 

 aspect. 



CYCADE^. 

 Macrozamia Moohei F.v.M. 



Head of Chirence River(Mr. David Cox, of Ramornie Meat 

 Works, per Chief Inspector of Stock; July, 1911). 



This species is recorded as a New South Wales plant in the 

 " Handbook of the Flora of New South Wales," from hearsay 

 only, i.e., from a report of Mr. A. Rudder that he had seen the 

 species on the eastern slopes of the tableland, north-west of 

 Grafton. Mr. Cox's specimens confirm Mr. Rudder's statement, 

 and we have Mr. Cox's specimens in the National Herbarium, 

 Sydney. 



FILICES. 

 Hymenophyllum marginatum Hook, et Grev. 



Under wet cliffs, on rocks, within spray of Horse-shoe Falls, 

 Blackheath, Blue Mountains(Rev. W. W. Watts; January, 1911). 



This was, perhaps, the rarest Australian fern, when Bentham 

 published the seventh volume of the Flora Australiensis in 1878, 

 but the precise locality had been lost. The only specimens known 

 at the time, weie collected by Charles Fraser, about 1825, and 

 the locality given was " Port Jackson or vicinity." 



In 1884, Mr. W. Baeuerlen collected it at Milton, N.S.W. (these 

 Proceedings, Vol. viii., p. 469), and established the first precise 

 locality for New South Wales; Mr. Watts was fortunate enough 

 to tind a second locality, that may be identical with Mr. Fraser's 

 original locality, which is one, we know, he visited. 



Plant other than from New South Wales. 



LEGUMINOS^. 



Acacia leptophleba F.v.M. 



Napier Broome Bay, North- West Australia(G. F. Hill, per A. 

 J. Campbell; 1910). 



