BY J. H. MAIDEN. 33 



24. flavescetis A. C-inm., Benth,. in Hook. Land. Journ. 

 Bat., i, 381. The type oomes from " North-east Coast." 

 In Bentham, p. 391, North Queensland localities are given. 

 In Bailey, p. 501, the onh^ additional locality e^iven is Mt. 

 Wheeler, Thozet. 



'Roth. {Bull. X. Q. Ethnography ^o. 1) explains how the 

 aborigines prepare twine from the bark, about Cape Bedford 

 and Cooktown. 



Cambage, p. 396, quotes Kuranda to Almaden. 



It comes as far south as Moreton Bay. 



25. oraria F.v.M. in Fragm., xi, 66. Co-types from 

 Port Denison, Rockingham Bay and Trinity Bay. Mueller 

 figures it in the Iconograph}^ 



JuLiFLOR.E (Rigidulse). 



26. Wickhami Benth. in Hook. Lond. Journ. Bot., i, 

 377 not 379. The type comes from Swan Bay, North West 

 Australia. In B. Fl., ii, 392, Bentham adds a Northern 

 Territory localitj*. 



Stannary Hills (Dr. T. L. Bancroft, through ,C. T. 

 White) is the only Queensland localitj^ known to me. 



27. lysiphlosa F.v.M. in Journ. Linn. Soc, iii, 137, as 

 lysiphloia. Type from the Northern Territory. It extends 

 to North Western Australia. 



The inner bark is used by the aborigines of the Middle 

 Palmer River (Roth in Bull. N. Q. Ethnography, No. 1), 

 which appears to be the first specific Queensland locality. 



I have seen it from Normanton (T. Hann). 



28. Chishohni Bailey in Queens. Agiic. Journ., iv, 

 p, 47. The type comes from Prairie, Torrens Creek. 

 Northern Railway Line. See also Bailey, p. 502. 



Cambage, p. 432, quotes it Normanton to Cloncurry ; 

 (?) p. 436, Cloncurry to Hughenden ; p. 437, Hughenden to 

 Prairie. 



29. umbellata A. Cunn., Benth. in Lond. Journ. Bot., 

 i, 378. {acradenia A. Cunn.). The co-types come from 

 ■Cleveland Bay and Cape Flinders. Bentham adds some 

 Northern Territory localities. It extends to North Western 

 •c 



