Í n, 
pea. | CIV. PROTEACEZX. | 535 
long, Flow pe Be : : 
í ers of T. speciosissima. Fruit 3 in. Joni; dti : 
and persistent style. D? esides the stipes 
Victoria. Nangatta mountains and Canus river, Gipps' Land, F. Mueller. 
iage glabrous. Leaves mostly oblong-cuneate, but vary- 
ing from oblong-linear to almost obovate, obtuse or with a small villous 
j th * c 
= veins often impressed above and scarcely conspicuous underneath, 
i wd be often recurved, Racemes short and dense, about 2 in. 
mner ones # in. long, t r, 
port herbaceous tips. Pedicels glabrous, about } in. long. Pe- 
i> under 1 in. long, the broad part shorter in proportion than in 
] ^ Speciosissima ee into a recurved neck at least as long. Fruit 
i g, besides the persistent style. Seeds about 16.—Meissn. 
E" Prod. xiv. 446; Hook. f. Fl. Tasm. i. 3897; Embothrium trun- 
P, m, Labill. Pl. Nov. Holl. i. 82, t. 44; Hylogyne australis, Knight, 
ot. 197. 
: np asmania. Mount Wellington, R. Brown ; abundant in cool humid mountainous 
“gons at an elevation of 2000 to 4000 ft., J. D: Hooker. 
25. LOMATIA, R. Br. 
(Tricondylus, Salisb.) 
EO the lamine long cohering. Anthers ovate, sessile in the con 
ve la Hypogynous glands 8, br ate, the fourth 
pper one deficient. Ovary on a long stipes, tapering mto à long style 
ards in 2 rows. Follicle coriaceous, opening a'm« , 
with a broad terminal nearly straight wing, sur- 
rees, Leaves alternate, 
1 
dm pale yellow, sometimes assuming at lengt 
of extra 
The str 
rile pellicle i d betwe 
| ale tone Marca peal nae of the seed itself, but its real nature 
it in a fresh state both before and after 
Maturity of the seed. 
