Isopogon. ] CIV. PROTEACER. 347 
22. I. petiolaris, A. Cunn. in R. Br. Prot. Nov. 8. A low bushy or 
procumbent "sei ner, allied to J. anemonifolius, the young shoots 
tomentose- ien the adult eos bee desee rous. " Leaves 
ng, * 
wticate, o ign ond. Cones Ate: to $ in. diameter 
ilhou: the erianths, or from 2 to 1 in. when in fruit. Outer bracts 
woolly outside but with Sogo lie than in J. anemonifolius. Perianth 
scarcely 4 lines long, glabrous except the small terminal tufts, the tube 
short. Styles of y Lacie folies: ee in DC. Prod. xi v. 979. 
Peapisland. North of Macintyre’s Brook, Cunningham. 
N. S. Wales. Paramat'a, Woolls; New ‘England C. Stuart; Reedy Creek, 
C n between the Bogan and Buree rivers, A. Cunningham 
monifolius, Knight. Prot. 09. A shrub of 4 to 6 ft., 
irs e muy t the cones or the branchba and young shoots rely ee 
y 
veined, the Wah ole leaf 2 to 4 in. long and nea arly as "eel Cones 
sessile, Petr or in clusters CE or 5 a the ends of the branches, 
nearly globular, j to 3 in. diameter. Outer bracts numerous but 
F. Muell. Fragm, vi. 238; Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 1937 ; Protea anemoni- 
foo, Salish Prod. 48; Bot. Mag. t. 697 ; and. Bob Hae © i; 
-tridact lites Cay, Lo. yt 33, t. 548. 
Aes S. Wal Port Jackson to the Blue Mountains, s Brown, Caley (with pu- 
v Jey Sieber, n. 18, and Fil. Mixt., n. 480, and many o others. 
"M [ tenuifolius, F. Muell. Leaf. yp ic narrow-lincar, short, igre gee above 
: "los of T. formo nosus.—T wofold Bay, F. Mueller , the specimens in frui 
Uga uiu. Leaf-segments sition erect, ‘jong. Perianth slightly As 
jdne ey? 'ynoe. 
L ceratophyllus, R. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. X. 72, Prod. i p 
glabrous shrub, usually forming dense ak prickly tufts under 
in, igh, but som ng I to 9 ft. Leaves crowded, on 
pa er long petioles, flattened but odali ds or pinnately di- 
led into linear rigid intricately divaricate pungent-po: ointed segments, 
iate. es § 
24. 
A low 
Wi in. near arly 
| Tacts ovate, glabrous ica thin, Erste and almost con- 
cealing the scales at ‘ais time of flowering. Cone-scales broad, villous 
