BY R. H. CAMBAGE. 583 



Many of these notes were made for purposes of personal refer- 

 ence only and not with the object of publication. The conditions 

 also under which they were taken did not permit of a thorough 

 investigation throughout a district, consequently they are not at 

 all exhaustive. The genus Eucalyptus is the only one which may 

 be considered approximately complete. So far as the Bathurst 

 district is concerned, a much more detailed list of plants may be 

 found in the ' Notes on the Flora of Bathurst ' of Mr. W. J. 

 Clunes Ross, B.Sc, F.G.S. (Kept. Assoc. Adv. Sci. vii., 1898, 467). 



From Bathurst to Limekilns is northerly about 20 miles, and 

 the conspicuous trees growing along the roadside are Eucalyptus 

 tereticornis, E. Bridgesicina, E. melliodora, E. viminalis, E. ruhida 

 (9-m.), E. Camhagei, E. macrorhyncha, E. polyanthema^ E. inacu- 

 losa, E. pidverulenta^ Sims, Casuarina Cunni7ighamiana, Ango- 

 jjhora intermedia, DC, (Apple), Acacia vestita, A. dealbata, A, 

 diffusa, A. lanigera, A. linifolia, Willd., and Kunzea peduncular-is, 

 F.v.M. 



Typical Devonian fossils may be found in some of the creeks 

 along this road, having been washed down from the hills to the 

 eastward. 



The trees of AngopJiora intermedia are first met with just 

 beyond the 6-mile post, and this is the only locality within the 

 area described in these papers where a species of Angophora has 

 been noticed. 



A. intermedia is a very common "Apple Tree" along the coast 

 and north-westerly districts, at least as far out as Gilgandra, but 

 over the Great Dividing Range it keeps practically to the northern 

 side of the Great Western Railway Line. Its timber is soft but 

 useful for some kinds of wheelwrights' work. Asa fuel it burns 

 well, and a dead tree lying on the ground will, after being lighted, 

 quietly burn right away, leaving in white ashes the imprint of 

 both trunk and branches. South of Bathurst (as intimated in 

 Part vi.) Eucalyptus Bridgesiana is usually known as Apple, but 

 when found growing in company with an Angophora it appears 

 to be either WooUybutt or Peppermint, though in Gippsland it 

 bears the native name of But But according to Mr. A. W. Howitt. 



