382 LVII. ARALIACEJE. [ Panaz, 
lines n the endocarp not very hard.—Nothopanax Murrayi, Seem. FI. 
Vit. 
— —— Bay, Dallac. 
N.S. Wales. Hastings river, Beckler ; Za Bay, F. Mueller. 
3. P. es , Benth. A tall shrub. Leaves sapr b ee? d pin- 
nate; leaflets ts ovate et or oblong, acum to 10 in. long, 
glabrous above, softly pubescent or villous undern Um I pu 
owered, numerous, in eye divaricately-branched pom the rhachis 
minutely tomentose. Calyx-teeth slightly and irregularly prominent. Styles 
long and slender. Fruit about 2 lines broad, but not seen quite ripe. 
Se ener Bay, Dallachy. 
1 e pedice cels. Culpa prominently cup-s od truncate or slightly 
Lage? Petals rather long and narrow. Frui ts about 3 lines broad, 
very flat, the carpels often readily separating, each with a thin pc - a 
flat smooth hard endoca carp.—Nothopanax Macgillivrayi, Seem. Fl. Vit. 114. 
Queensland. Cape York, M'Gillivray ; Albany Island, JW. Hill. 
5. P. sambucifolius, Sieb. in DC. Prod. iii. 255. A tall shrub or tree, 
Les glabrous. Leaves ST or double pinnate ; leaflets exceedingly 
in Trans. Phil. Inst, Vict. i. 42, and PL Vict. t. 28; Nothopanaa sambucl- 
folius, Seem. Fl. Vit. 115. 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson to the Blue Mountains, R. Brown ; de wii 
others ; northward to Hastings, Macleay, and Clarence er Beckler ; south 
lawarra, A. en ningham ; Berrima, , Woo dis; and Twofold Bay, F. oli and 
ictoria. Mountains from Dandenong and Mount ee o the Buffalo range 
a great part of Dh Land, F. Mue th 
Tasmania. Douglas 8 river, E. DS Milligan, according to F. Mueller, but the speci- 
A" are in ed ei? and appear to me to be somewhat doubtful. Mike € 
narrow die urit eaves are so very unli 
any Panaz, that fa Cunningham had distributed them under the name of Bien pin- 
iere- Fhe manne however, in which the various forms of leaflets are combined, 
Same specimens, show that all belong to one species. 
6. P. cephalobotrys, P. Muell. Fragm. ii. 83. Shrubby, somewhat 
