204 XLVIII. MYRTACEJE. [ Eucalyptus. 
6. T coccifera, Hook. f. in Hook. Lond. Journ. vi. 417, and Fl. 
Tasm 3. £. 25. A small tree ere? CN Ee Leaves lanceo- 
late, Lët or Te mos ae? in. , thick and shining, the 
calyx, 4 to 5 or even 6 lines diameter, the rim flat and rather broad, the cap- 
sule scarcely depressed, with eer valves.—Bot. Mag. t. 4637 ; E. daphnoides, ` 
Mig. in Ned. Kruidk. Arch. iv. 133 
Tasmania. Summits of the mountains at an elevation of 3000 to 4000 ft, J. D. 
ooker. : 
Var. parviflora. Flowers much smaller, the peduncles exceedingly short.— Mount 
S zech 
as much the aspect of some thick-leaved forms of E. amygdalina, but is 
SS ees € the depressed operculum and longer calyx. 
» obliqua, Lier. Sert. Angl. 18. t. 20. An immense tree sisi 
6 in. long, "thick with very obliqte distant anatomosing veins, the inti: 
er flattened, very obtuse, shorter than the calyx-tube. Stamens fully 3 lines P 
long, all perfect; anther-cells diverging or at jaye divaricate and confluent 
at the apex. Ovary flat-topped. Fruit more or less pear-shaped, truncate 
at the top, 3 to 5 lines "pod slightly sisse at the orifice, the rim 
rather broad and concave, the capsule m more or less sunk.—DC. Pr od. iii. 219; 
F. Muell. Fragm. i ii. 172; E. gigantea, Hook. f. in Hook. fe Journ. vi. 
479; FL. Tasm. i. 136. t. 28; P. Muell. Fragm. ii. 44, 171; Æ. /aleifolia, 
Miq. in Ned. Kruidk, Arch. iv. 136, as to the S. Ntra specimens ; 
E. nervosa, F. Muell. ; Miq. in Ned. Kruidk. Arch. i 
es. Probably in the southern soem GH E Land, but I have 
only seen — — referable to this 
Victoria. Cons s vast “ Stringy-bar A Ee soving many hilly parts of M 
_ country ats extending to the Grampians, F. Mueller, and o 
asmani bundant in most parts of EE island, Imig a great part of the bill- 
forests and ascending to 4000 ft., “ Stringy Ds 
s. Fo Ue " Strin er bak" " ` forests Se rg giis of the Glenelg, om 
Mount Gambier, Mn. F. Mue az Go other: 
rorum, Schlecht. Linnea, xx. 656, is Zeie ty F. Mueller to Z. obliqua, mm 
to the eech stating it to be the * Str tringy-bark" of the colonists, and very possibly gere 
Behr's specimens may be of that T but the only authentic one I have seen in a per Së 
state is evidently E viminalis. “ Messmate,” from Dandenong and other parts 
tee e, 
