472 ON FOUR NEW SPECIES OF EUCALYPTUS, 



Range east of Bolivia; Glen Innes and Grafton Road " (E. C. 

 Andrews). I have also received it from Stanthorpe, Queensland, 

 where it is a " very large tree, soft timber, thick sap, thick 

 bark " (A. Murphy). 



Its range, therefore, as far as is known at present, is the 

 Dividing Range and spurs from near Picton Lakes in the south, 

 to Southern Queensland in the north, its most westerly locality 

 so far recorded being Wallerawang. 



I name it in honour of my old friend Henry Deane, M.A., 

 M. Inst. C.E., Engineer-in-Chiei for Railway Construction of this 

 State, my coadjutor in much work on the genus published in 

 these Proceedings and whose stimulus and counsel in botanical 

 work I have enjoyed for twenty years. He first drew my atten- 

 tion to this tree in March, 1888, at The Valley, Blue Mountains, 

 and I have had it under observation ever since. 



3. Eucalyptus Andrewsi, sp.nov. 



A tall tree, on an average say 80 feet in height, with a stem 

 diameter of 2-3 feet. " On the Bulldog Hill, 3,000 feet, (between 

 the Timbarra and Clarence Rivers), it attains a diameter of at 

 least 8 feet, and the height of large trees is most likely from 150 

 to 180 feet. Here it consorts with true Blackbutts, E. pihdaris, 

 and Forest Oaks {Casuai'ina torulosa) which even at times rise 

 100 feet, and 50 or 60 feet without a branch" (E. C. Andrews). 



Writing from Drake to Mr. Cambage, Mr. Andrews says : — 

 " One tree we measured 20' in circumference, about 80'-100' to 

 first limb, and from 150'-180' high (guess). Another 23' circum- 

 ference, 170' high (?). Another we measured 25' 6" round butt 

 (4' above ground). Blackbutt-top but about 150' high then. I 

 suppose there were from 50 to 100 from 18' to 20' and 21' in 

 circumference." 



Juvenile leaves rather large and soon becoming alternate, 

 glaucous. The youngest foliage available to me is elliptical and 

 about 4 inches long by half the width, with petioles of \ inch. 

 "Seedlings have erect habit, with fairly large leaves; pale in 

 colour" (R. H. Cambage). 



