Ur THE KEV. li. SCORTECUINI, LL.B., F.L.S. 219 



able by me, because I have not yet seen its flowers. This same 

 Laurel which is of large size with deep, soft bark of a reddish 

 colour, and aromatic flavour grows in greater abundance on the 

 banks of Neraug Creek, and I traced it at the entrance of the 

 Tweed Eiver. 



SlMAE,UBE.E. 



Cadellia monostylis, Benth., Fl. Aus. I., 375. 



This Cadellia was observed by me in the scrub of Wilson's 

 Peak, where it is most plentiful as the fugacious yellow petals 

 scattered on the ground indicate. It was by Baron Mueller 

 elevated to the rank of a monotypic genus under the name of 

 Guilfoylia (Frag. VIII., 34) ; bul now it has been placed in its 

 former position of a Cadellia, in the recension of Australian 

 genera by the illustrious Baron and among Quassiads. The genus 

 Guilfoylia is now omitted. 



Olacine.e. 

 Pennantia Cunninghamii, Miers. Ann. Nat, His. 



A rare tree ; both male and female plants to be seen in the 

 Upper Coomora scrubs. The female flowers are two-thirds the 

 size of the male ones, with barren anthers, and the leaves of the 

 female tree are longer and broader than those of the male plant. 



Celastrine^e. 



Leucocarpon (Benhaiiria) pittosporoides, F.v.M. 



Seen at Tallebudgera and Mount Maroon at the source of the 

 Logan. The generic appellation Leiicocarpon is to be preferred 

 to Denliauria as Baron Mueller remarks in Frag. YL, 203, and 

 in fact he adopts it in his census of our genera, because of its 

 priority. It was abandoned because bryologists had preoccupied 

 it, however as bryologists now have dropped the genus Leucocarpon 

 by right of priority it must be restored to its former appellation. 



