52 CXXVIL LILIACER. [Tricoryne. 
Queensland. Sandy mower Endeavour River, Banks and Solander, A. Cunning- 
ham ; Rockingham Bay, Dallachy 
9. T. muricata, Baker in Journ. Linn, Soc. xv. 863.—Stems erect, 
, With numerous slender strongly striate or angular branches as in 
T. anceps, but the angles hispid with small rigid transparent hairs 
Leaves reduced to scales, bows and flowers of T. anceps, of which this 
may prove to be a hispid va 
Queensland. Wide Bay, Bidweil. 
4. T. elatior, R. Br. pes 278.—Stems from a perennial sometimes 
thick and woody rhizome erect or ascending, more or less branched, 
often under 1 ft. but daoiiie above 2 feet high, the branches few or 
numerous, but rarely more than 8 in a cluster, slender or even filiform 
especially in the western gre striate but less so than in T. anceps. 
ower leaves often grass-like, 2 to 4 in. long, the upper ones and some- 
times all reduced to short scales. Umbels usually 8- or 4-flowered in 
the eastern specimens, with 6 or more flowers in most of the western 
ones, the scarious bracts usually prominent and 1 or 2 outer ones often 
produced into subulate points of 8 or 4 lines. Perianth very variable in 
size, but usually about 4 lines long. Nutlets smaller than in T. anceps.— 
Baker in Sore Linn. Soe. xv. 862; Bauer, Illustr. Pl. Nov. Holl. t. 11; 
Endl. Iconogr. t. 61; Endl. in Pl. Preise ii. 835; Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. ii. 
55; T. anceps, Endl. l.c. 86, not of R. Br, 
ui land.  Moreton Island, M:Gillivray, Eaves; Condamine River, Leich- 
hardt ; phys Downs, F. Mueller ; Armidale, Perrott ; Rockhampton, O Shanesy ; Port 
Curtis, livray. 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson to the Blue Mountains, R. Brown and others; north- 
New land, C. Stuart ; Hastings River, Beckler r; southward to Illawarra, 
= Dminghan ; and in the interior, Darling River to Cooper's Creek, Victorian and 
«pea 
ommon on the Glenelg, the Yarra, etc., and in the Grampians, Robert- 
son, F. Mueller, and others 
Tasmania. kits 
Esk River, co and others; VE. wes In these 
Tasmanian specimens the flowers e usually dics a de in the bels than 
in those from N.S N. S. "Wales, less io ina he the 
Waien St. Vincent's Gulf, F. alr oa sr ste" Port Lincoln, R. Brows 
mi. 
vig a 8 es Be B. Br own, A. Cunningham, F. Mueller, and 
thers ers; and thence to y dos Rivers, Drummond, Preiss, n. 1715 and 
2227, Oldfield and others ; iiw. to ei mik Ana Max 
T. scabra, R. Br. Prod. 218, om Keppel Bay, a rs 
T. _ elatior, a bus with a few Ham nto hairs sea ca an 
a common form of 
scattered on the fee part of the stem, very 
ie, E. Bel e. fiie in Jour . Linn. Soc. xv. 362, from Port Lincoln, i$ # 
very ended dwarf branching hen, wi which I cannot otherwise distin distinguish from T. 
latior, 
5. T. simplex, R. Br. Prod. 278.— Stems simple or very inb di once- 
ed. 6 in. to 1 ft. high, with a few grass-like leaves sometimes 3$ 
long as the stem. Umbel soli 
very numerous flowers 
(usually above 20), the pedicels longer than the petianth. Bracts all 
