446 CIV. PROTEACER, | Grevillea, 
lute under the limb. ead very oblique, the gland side the shortest. 
Ovary villous except in wiht the axillary-flow rered species. Stig- 
matic disk very oblique or Aaa 
eo ane e torus, which is the chief character of this and the following section, is 
perhaps a somewhat artificial one, but is usually well marked. The first five of the 
following species differ from the heb egynous Hugrevillee chieri in the torus, the re- 
mainder of the present section correspond rather with Ptychoca 
46. G. Goodii, R. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. x. 174, Pro d. 979. Stems 
prostrate, diffuse (or sometimes erect ?) the young bra ae minutely 
tomentose. Leaves petiolate, oval-elliptical to cblong-lanceolate, ob- 
tuse, rounded or cuneate at the base, 3 to 8 in. ong; glabrous or the 
nu 
reflexed hairs, the tube obli Hal dilated at the base, attenuate jd 
the Aena and pe ds the — p depressed lim 
Torus very oblique, linear, about 3 line Gland ho 
npn slightly prominent Ovary villous sith Pints hairs, stipitate 0n 
he upper margin of the torus; style very long, more or less ciliate; 
stigmatic disk broad, lateral.—Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 351; Guillem. 
Ic. Pl. Austral. t. 16. 
N. Australia. Nor th Coast, R. Brown; Port Essington, Armstrong; Point 
Pearce and Newcastle Range, F. Mueller. 
Queens i Fatdsfóne country, head of Cape and Flinders rivers, Bowm 
Powe foliage bears some resemblance to that of G. laurifolia, but the wies. are (oll 
47. G. venusta, R. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. X. 175, Prod. a 3 
tall shrub or ill tree, the young branches a nd inflorescence fe 
e and often confluent in an intramarginal nerve, 
fy Gades ntose ae ae op with ferruginous veins. m 
rather loose but short like those of G.,  Wilsoni. Perianth 
with appressed dien] din tube about 5 lines long, ver obliqu 
at the base, attenuate and revolute above the middle. 
cti a. Siei na R. Brown. I have not seen this species anywhere 
ee in R. Brown's Herbarium 
p erect 
8. G. longistyla, Hook. in Mitch. Trop 343. E 
krab of 7 or 8 ft., the young branches dici i omentose. 
