760 MISCELLANEOUS NOTES ON EUCALYPTUS, I., 



In describing E, Wilkinsonimia (a very different plant whose 

 position I shall refer to in my next paper), Mr. R. T. Baker 

 does not even mention E. Sieberiana, and makes certain observa- 

 tions in regard to E. hcemastoma^ Sm., which species-name had 

 been introduced by Mueller into a discarded label as already 

 shown, and into a note in Part ii. (1879) of the ' Eucalypto- 

 graphia ' under E. hoiinastoma. 



11. E. SIDEROPHLOIA, Bcnth., var. glauca, Deane and Maiden. 



These Proceedings, 1899, p. 461. 



"On the sides of hills and out of the crevices of rock, all over 

 the district, not perhaps plentiful, but widely scattered over the 

 hills." A stunted tree, Gungal, near Merriwa (J. L. Boorman). 



This perhaps ma}^ be confused with E. sideroxylon, A. Cunn., 

 var. 2)allens, Benth., in the absence of fruits. It is perhaps 

 identical with the "Silver-leaved Ironbark" of New England, W. 

 Woolls, of Part 13 of my 'Forest Flora of New South Wales.' 

 I have not fruits of the latter. 



12. E. Baueriana, Schauer. 



See these Proceedings, 1902, p. 214. 



Thirteen miles from Stanthorpe, Queensland (A. Murphy; 

 March, 1904). " A box-tree with bark like hemiphloia and con- 

 tinuing rough out to the young limbs; timber very hard." Fruits 

 very large. 



Other locaUties not previously enumerated are: "Tingha, 

 2800 feet, on granite (B. H. Cambage);" Bolivia, near Tenterfield, 

 •' bark persistent to the smallest branches" (H. Deane, 1885). 



With reference to p. 219 {op. cit.) I have also seen var. conica 

 n Queensland, near Wallangarra. 



13. E. HEMIPHLOIA, F.V.M., vai\ ALBENS, F.V.M. 



A White Box from Gulgong (J. L. Boorman), " plentiful all 

 over the lowlands of this district," adds another to forms of 

 E. hemiphloia. Compared with typical var. alhens its fruits are 

 smaller, its pedicels are absent, and it is markedly constricted at 



