Pityrodia.] XCII. VERBENACE®, 2! 
and erect, the 2 lateral ones rather lar er, the lowest twice as b 
and 2 than the others. Ovary glabrous or slightly woolly, usually 
y 2 perfect ovules, each one attached to an exceedingly long 
filiform and several times folded funicle. Fruit not seen.—Chioanthes 
Muell Fragm. ii 
lovocarpa, F. ii. 22; Quoya loxocarpa, F. Muell. 
Fragm. iv. 80. 
Bay Australia. Murchison river, Oldfield, Drummond, 6th coll. n. 141; Flinders' 
y, Cole. 
The indumentum of the calyx and sometimes of the whole plant is exceedingly 
variable, 
8. P. dilatata, P. Muell. A branching shrub, densely clothed with 
à white cottony wool, more or less floccose on the branches and c yxes, 
Shorter on the leaves and sometimes DE from the old ones. 
Leaves obovate or oblong-spathulate, narrowe 
dilated and stem-clasping at the base, thick and much bullate-rugose 
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9 to 10 lines lone. the tube gradually dilated upwards but scarcel 
more so than in en di of Chloanthes, upper lobes of the limb 
above the middle to rather long erect funicles or almost sessile and 
attached at or near the top. Fruit not seen.—Chloanthes dilatata or 
Quoya dialata, F. Muell. Fragm. vi. 157. 
W. Australia, Drummond, n. 210. 
9. P. Cuneata, Benth. A rigid divaricate shrub, densely clothed 
with cottony stellate or branched white or yellowish hairs, more Woo ly 
: E ^4 
