_ Conospermum. | CIV. PROTEACER. 378 
and the leaves much broader, bes however from T lanceolate 
to oval-elliptical or oblong-cuneate, obtuse or ac dem om under j in. 
lous, 24 to 3 lines long, the tube but little longer than the lips.—R. Br. 
in Trans. Linn. Soc x. 153, Prod. 868; Meissn. in DC. Prod. xiv. 322; 
C. Ee Knight, Prot. 95. 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson, R. Brown, and other 
Var. imbricatum. Leaves more s closely imbricate and ioti pr fe long. 
—C. imbricatum, Sieb. in Spreng. Syst. Cur. Post. 46; R. Br. Prot. Nov. 9; Meissn. 
00 E xiv. 322. — Port Jackson or Blue Mountains, Sieber, n. Pre y aden y al. 
26. c. TP R. Br. in Trans. Linn. Soc. x. 155, Prod. 369, not 
ones shorter. Spikes sh hore pes in the upper "E 1 to 2 in. 
long, iA rhachis tomentose, 
concave upper lip ae glabrous, but only very shortly protruding 
from the dense wool which covers the remainder of the perianth rite 
ing the 3- iem lower lip.— €. procerum, F. Muell. Fragm. i. 157. 
8 W. Aus King George's Sound or more pr [ad to the eastward ? Bazter ; 
T river? amd m coll. n. 585; Cape Arid, Maxwell. 
X. C. flori ibundum, Benth. A shrub of 2 or 3 ft., closely allied 
isti t C. ineurvum does 
wv Eu [9 river, Drummond, 1st coll. n. 580, Preiss, n. 740; Stirling 
C. incurvum, Lindl. Swan Riv. . 80. An erect branching 
shrub, the stems niin wtet pubes de “foliage g elabrous. Leaves 
T ; Very narrow linear, almost terete, s reading and incurved, i 
l in. long.” Peduncles terminal, 6 to 10 in. long including the in- 
