133 



8. Bloodivoods. — These have gum-veins and are coarse grained ; corymbosa is red, 

 and eximia and trachyphloia, which are pale, connect with maculata. 



9. Jarrah Group. — -Containing a number of heterogeneous species, and which 

 I name after the best known member. Some have fibrous barks, others are smooth, 

 but they are all deep red, durable timbers. Examples : marginata, resinifera, diversi- 

 color, propinqua, punctata, saligna, botryoides, robusta, tereticornis, rostrata, longifolia, 

 This group connects with the Ked Boxes. 



1904. — " Notes on the Commercial Timbers of New South Wales," (2nd edition, 

 1904). In this edition I submitted a classification — 



1. Ironbarks. 



2. Stringybarks, including — 



White Stringybark (E. eugenioides). 



Red or Coast Stringybark (E. capitellata). 



Red or Mountain Stringybark (E. macrorrhyncha). 



Messmate or Stringybark (E. obliqua). 



3. Pale Hardwoods — 



(a) Mountain Ash (Mountain form of E. obliqua, subsequently ascertained 



to be E. gigantea. Also E. Sieberiana and virgata var. altior 

 (E. altior or E. oreades) ). 



(b) Blackbutt (E. pilularis). 



(c) White Mahogany (E. acmenioides). 



(d) Tallow- wood (E. microcorys). 



(e) Spotted Gum (E. maculata). 

 (/ ) Grey Box (E. hemipJdoia). 



(g) Some other pale-coloured Boxes of secondary importance — 



A. Yellow Box (E. melliodora). 



B. A Yellow or Bastard Box (E. Bosistoana). 



C. A Box (E. quadrangulata). 



(h) Some miscellaneous pale timbers — - 



A. Mountain Gum (E. goniocalyx). 



B. Bundy or Mountain Apple (E. Cambagei, since ascertained to be 



E. elo3ophora). 



C. A Blue Gum (E. Maideni). 



(i) Boxes of intermediate colour — 



A. Round-leaf Box or Fuzzy Box (E. Baueriana). 



B. Bimble Box (E. populifolia). 



C. Ironbark Box, Mallee Box (E. odorata). 



