536 CIV. PROTEACEJE. [ Lomatia. 
Leaves pinnate ven ovate jietialolate etin 1. L. fraxinifolia. 
— un dci once or twice pinnate, with sessile or decur- 
segmen fa daually Fetisutate anid toothed. 
Savin geh undivided, ovate to lanceolate, acutely toothed, 
rarely 2. L. ilicifolia. 
Jena Lese undivided, linear- lanceolate, with callous ser- 
ratures 3. L. longifolia. 
Leaves mostly once twice or thrice pin ate 4. L. silaifolia. 
ves narrow, undivided, pinnatifid or =k nate, otherwise entire 
or rarely toothed at the end, rather thick and veinles 
Leaves jog pinnate, glabrous or nearly so. Radlk long 
and loose 5. L. tinctoria. 
Leaves mostly undivided, ‘closely and densely t tomentose 
underneath. Racemes short and den . 6. L. polymorpha. 
the inflorescence 
slightly ferruginous-tomentose. Leaves iod pinnate; segments 9 to 
7, ovate or ovate-lanceolate, acuminate , parey thed, contracted 
into a distinct petiolule, 2 to 3 or rarely 4 in. long, coriaceous and shin- 
again divided. Racemes 6 to 8 in. long, solitary or several in a broad 
al panicle. Pedicels 3 or 4 lines long. Perianth glabrous, 4 to 
9 lines long, the limb ovoid. Fruit only seen young. 
oo Rockingham Bay, Dallachy. 
2. L. ilicifolia, 7 R. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. x. 200, Prod. 390, Prot. 
Non “ee 33. An erect branching shrub of several ft. , growing out some- 
times into a small tree, quite PE Or = oung shoots and inflo- 
rescence more or less ferruc ginous-pub t. Leaves pne ovate 
oblong or m irregularly prickly-toothed or lobed, varying : s 
2 or 3 in. in some speci ns, to twice that size in others, glabrous abov 
aid eta or less petincilctes "closely and shortly silk T. -pulescent do 
neath; the upper leaves often small and distant, and on barr hoo i 
the leaves sometimes pinnate with numerous small sessile or dedurrel 
miris toothed segments. s my long and loose, simple - slightly 
nched. Pedicels 1 to } in. 1 ong. Perianth dep or p 
with smal] appressed hairs, the tube 3 to 34 lines long. Fru en 
n. long.—Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 447; Bot. Mag. t. 4025; 
rium "yard pte Dict. Suppl. ii. 551; L. Fraseri, R. Br. Prot. Nov: 
84; Meissn. 
N. S. Wales. Wombat Brush, Fraser, A. Qunnin pet eae Woolls; New 
e C. Stuart; Clarence river Pele | Lenna m; N j t Dir a 
ea os Phill ip, R. Brown leo n's — Baxter; Dam pE 
of 
m 
ET northe ern a are generally more ferruginous-pubescent than pen 
Clare some | New England have the leaves all small and ovate; i n natifid Wi ith 
nce river they are frequently pinnate, and in one instance some are pinna 
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