stringybark trees ( Kiiralypht* oltJifiua) on the Emu River. I content myself 

 with quoting three. The first was 45 feet, in circumference, and the sup- 

 pi'M-d height ISO feet; the top hrokeii. The second \v;is 55 feet in circum- 

 ference; supposed to be upwards of 200 feet high. IFe measured, near 

 Hampshire Hills, two trees that had heeii felled for splitting: into rails, each 

 !so feet long. 



llnhitftf. It is found in Tasmania, South Australia, Victoria, and Xew 

 South .Wales. 



XKW Sorrn WALKS. 



It extends from south to north of the State. Its northernmost limit is a 

 matter for further investigation, but it extends nearly to the Queensland 

 border. It is found growing , in company with E. gonicalyx and other 

 .species on the Irish Corner .Mountain, Reidsdale, Sugarloaf Mountain, and 

 ; round Molina, both on the eastern and western fall of those mountains. 

 The trees are fairly abundant, and are to be found growing- to a height of 

 from 100 to 150 feet, with a girth of from 6 to 10 feet. In Xew England 

 rowiteh) it is associated with E. viminalis, 



llowitt makes the statement, as regards (Jippsland, that "it appears to 

 bo essentially a littoral form, but ascends the mountains. trc." The first 

 part of this statement does not appear to hold true in Xew South Wales. 

 The tree grows right on the top of the ranges with us, and never in the 

 littoral lands, as far as observed. It frequents situations where it can be 

 readied and enveloped in the sea-fogs; in this remote sense alone can tho 

 word " littoral " be applied to trees with us. On the Tantawanglo Mountain 

 it grows abundantly, in company with "Cut-tail" and other Eucalypts, at 

 a height of about :,000 feet above the sea. At Reidsdale it occurs at an 

 elevation of from 2,000 to 2,500 feet, and in New England nearly 4,000 feet. 



Snnffn'i'ii. Tantawanglo Mountain (H. Deane and J.H.M.) ; "Messmate.'' 

 Candelo (A. Rudder) ; " Tororago " ( Tarago), Twofold Bay, S.E. Australia. 

 ISTo. 2iiii. S. Mossman. In Herb. Cant, ex herb. Lemanii. Doubtless Tarago, 

 via Braidwood, on an old route to Twofold Bay. 



"Woolly-topped Messmate," Irish Corner Mountain, Reidsdale, Sugarlo'af 

 Mountain, and around Monga (Forester J. S. Allan). 



"Broad-leaf Messmate,"' Wingello (J.H.M'. and J. L. Boorman). Mr. 

 Boorman's note on another occasion is: "Large trees, wood of a yellowish 

 colour. Fibrous bark to tips of branches. Inner bark pale yellow, lea\ es 

 large." 



"White Mahogany," Wingello (A. Murphy), but not to be confused with 

 either E. Mitelleriana or E. acmenioides. 



Northern. -Three miles past Myrtle Scrub (near Yarrowitch, Hastings 

 River to Waleha), one comes across a handsome forest, in basalt country, 

 consisting mainly of a smooth-barked Eucalypt (riminalis), and a rough- 

 barked one (obliqua). The discovery of the latter species in this part of 

 the State was quite unexpected, and extends its northern range very con- 

 siderably. The trees were over 100 feet high, and their trunks 3 feet and 

 more in diameter, so that the tres are fine specimens, and not the depauperate 

 forms of mere outliers or pickets. One of my travelling companions (Mr. 

 J. F. Campbell, L.S., of Waleha) stated that this belt of country extended for 

 30 miles in a general direction of north and soxith, roughly following the 

 county boundary, and he believed that this species occurred over the greater 

 portion of that county. Mr. Xivison, of Yarrowitch, states it occurs at 



