348 CIV. PROTEACEJE. [ Isopogon. 
outside, the outer ones with short broad glabrous ends, all closely im- 
bricate after lowering. Perianth rather above } in. long, the tube very 
slender and the lamine small, glabrous or with minute terminal tufts 
of hairs. Style-end clavate, minutely papillose-pubescent, contracted 
into a short neck below the bulbous base of t arly glabrous brush. 
d 
EU 
[e] 
Receptacle ovoid-conical, rather short.—Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 279; 
Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. i. 319; F. Muell. Fragm. vi. 238. 
Victoria. Port Phillip, R. Brown ; from the Glenelg river, Robertson, to Gipps’ 
Land, F. Mueller ; Wimmera, Dallachy. 
asmania. Flinders' Island, Gunn; isles of Bass’s Straits, Bynoe. 
. Australia. Mount Barker, Whittaker ; St. Vincent's Gulf, Blandowski ; Lofty 
Range, Guichen and Encounter Bays, F. Mueller. 
W. Australia? King George's Sound, M‘Lean in Herb. Hooker, but perhaps 
some mistake. 
. I. asper, R. Br. Prot. Nov. 8. A shrub, sometimes low, with 
. erect nearly simple branches of 1 to 2 ft., (Preiss and others), sometimes 
cent, the foliage slightly scabr Leaves crow with te 
ow nts forked or 3-lobed, all the segments rigid, linear, flat or 
» glabrous, in 
clavate, densely papillose-pubescent, separated by a short constr 
from the slightly bulbous pubescent base of the brush which is minutely 
hirsute in longitudinal lines. Receptacle nearly globular.—Meissn. 10 
Pl. Preiss. i. 505, and in DC. Prod. xiv. 278; T. scaber, Lindl. Swan 
Riv. App. 34, not of Bot. Mag. 
W. Australia. Swan river, Drummond, 1st coll. n. 574 ; Colonial Church Grant, 
Preiss, n. 689 ; Hampden, Clarke; Gordon and Canning rivers, Oldfield. 
_ 96. I. crithmifolius, F. Muell. Fragm. vi. 239. Very closely al- 
lied to T. formosus, and perhaps one of its numerous varieties 
leaves are, as in Z. roseus, flattened though concave, 
nately divided into linear or linear-cuneate entire or 2 
ments, sometimes very short but more frequently the 
divided portion each from 4 to 1 in. long. Cones and flow 
of T. formosus. 
* 
- or 3-lobed seg- 
tiole and the 
river, Drummond, Ist coll. n. 5€3 (with narro 
ferred by eissner to J. roseus, he having inadvertently, as pointed out by Fy 
overlooked the sectional difference in the structure of the cones. 
once or twice TI. 
ers entirely 1 
V. Australia. Swan w pnt 
ments), J. S. Roe (with short broad leaf-segments). Drummond's specimen Aller ; 
D VE AN O EENE a eot, A A EEE Se ERE SEE E nnt VIS. p c oC EL S Pi EE DLE 
TAS eT ORT 
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