184 XLVIII. MYRTACEJE. gë, 7 
M. anomala, Vent. Jard. Malm. t. 5; M. a i Pers. Syn. PL ii. 25; 
ees ierg? hen Enum. Hort. Berol. ii. 
Se S. Wales. rt Jackson, R. Brown, Sieber, n. a and others. 1 
. A. ‘subyelutin, F. Maei, Fragm. i. 31. » icol attaining a Sty 3 
Mueller now thinks it may be a variety. Foliage "nd youl shoots quud : 
j i on VE 
or minutely Pom with often a few bristles the flowering branches 
and infl e essile or nearly ovate or ovate- ME 
ounded auricles as in 4. c re ifolia, 2 to 4 in. long, the veins numerous but — 
Bo usually so cand so nor so fine as in A. inlorme dia. Flowers small, n 
loose corymbs, precisely as iu 4. intermedia, Fruiting calyxes 3 to 4 lines ` 
diameter.—/. velutina, F. Muell. Fragm. iv. 170. 
Weeden rale Born, and Boyd rivers, F. Mue 
Gro r, R. Browns Parama tta, Cayley, Woolls (the aom ` 
cence more fern y uh. poor and po rivers, Bec : 
‘ termedia, DC. Prod. iii. 222. A tree pum a consider jr 
` able size with a rough persistent fibrous bark, quite glabrous or slightly ` 
pubescent, or rarely with a few bristles on the inflorescence Leaves d distinctly ` 
petiolate, lanceolate or sometimes ovate-lanceolate, acutely acuminate, 2 to 
in. long, or even more in some specimens. Flowers rather small, in l: 
corymbs or trichotomous panicles. Calyx usually about 2 as long di za 
uae diameter at the top, but sometimes ST, larger, the 5 r S 
nent and the secondary ones also conspicu ; the "teeth shortly si i 
Gate "halt as long as the tube. Fruiting Pret 3 to 4 lines diameter at If ` 
top and about as “long. — Metrosideros floribunda, Sm. in Trans. Linn pe : 
iii. 267 (not of Ventenat 
à. Inthe interior, Mitchell. 
. S. Wales. Grose , R. Brown; Port Jackson, Cayley, Woolls, and 0 
northwurd to Clarence river, "Bechler, and New England, C. Stuart ; southward to 
y, F. Mueller. 
Victoria. Mouth of the Genoa river, F. Melior. 
4. A. lanceolata, Cav. Ic. iv. 22. £. 339. A tree of considera 
the bark deciduous in ‘large smooth flakes s as in A. cordifolia ; brane 
foliage glabrous and scarcely glaucous, or rarely a few bristles on the i 
cence. "Leaves distinctly petiolate, lanceolate, acuminate, mostly 
long, coriaceous, with numerous fine parallel pinnate veins. than 
rather dense terminal corymbs or short eae larger and more dense 
in A. intermedia, rather smaller than in cordifolia. Calyx usually a 
name ay c. 26); of apocynifolia, Salisb. Prod. 3 à 
eensland, Burnett river, F. Mueller ; Boyd river, Me F. Mueller; 
bay, €. Stuart. jin 
Ww: Port Jackson to the Blue Mountains, Burton, A. and R. — 
and otliers, and in the interior north of Bathurst, 4. Cunningham. 
