108 



others about as long as the seed-bearing portion of the fruit or 

 somewhat longer. Central Australia. 



Tliis plant has also been gathered near the Finke River by the 

 Rev. H. Kempe. The leaves are in form similiar to those of 

 C. cymbacantJia, while the fruits are much like those of C. lappu- 

 lacea, but the headlets and leaves are much larger. 



Ipomoea racemigera, F, v. M. and Tate. 



Imperfectly beset with short hairlets ; leaves small, on rather 

 long stalks, cordate, from the conspicuously bilobed lower portion 

 gradually narrowed into an acute apex, without any incisions or 

 denticles, on the surface nearly glabrous ; racemes as long as the 

 leaves or longer with several flowers ; pedicels much shorter than 

 the calyx ; outer sepals almost cordate tov/ards the base, gradually 

 acuminated ; corolla small, hardly half exserted ; stamens three 

 times shorter than the corolla ; style short ; ovulary glabrous. . 

 Glen Helen. 



Branches slightly verrucular-rough. Leaves on the only and 

 fragmentary specimen available, 1 ^ inches long. Racemes possibly 

 in amply develojjed inflorescences cymously arranged. Corolla 

 white. Fruit unknown. 



This is nearest /. chryseides, but that plant has a cymous in- 

 florescence, blunt sepals and a yellow corolla ; the fruit of the two 

 may also be difiJerent. In aspect the plant is also not unlike 

 Hewettia hicolor. 



GooDENiA FAscicuLARis, F. V. 31. and Tate. 



Dwarf, herbaceous, depressed, stoloniferous, almost glabrous ; 

 radical leaves linear- or cuneate-lanceolar, often somewhat in- 

 dented ; stem-leaves quite linear, entire, the uppermost frequently 

 fasciculated ; flowers axillary and terminal, solitary, rather small ; 

 peduncles about twice as long as the flowers, bractless ; lobes of 

 the calyx very nari'ow, about as long as its tube ; corolla yellow, 

 beset as well as the calyx with appressed hairlets outside, all the 

 lobes almost equally bilobed, the two upper outward scariously 

 appendiculated ; style much shorter than the corolla, bearing 

 hairlets at and towards the summit ; stigma-cover much broader 

 than long ; fruit ovate-globular, only its summit emerging ; seeds 

 surrounded by a conspicuous membrane. Basedow Range. 



Near G. heteroiiiera, G. filiformis, and G. O'DonneUii. 



Teucrium graxdiusculum, F. v. J/, and Tate. 



Beset with spreading, very short, somewhat glandular hairlets ; 



upper leaves sessile, flat, equally green on both sides, from 



rhomboid- to cuneate-ovate, entire towards the base, thence 



serrated ; floral leaves similar in form, but smaller and crowded ; 



