144 



E. fraxinoides Dearie and Maiden. 

 Pale-coloured, light in weight, fissile, tough. 



E. GIGANTEA Hook. f. 



Very pale, very fissile, of especial merit. 



E. oreades R. T. Baker, 

 rale-coloured, rather soft, fissile. 



E. REGNANS F.V.M. 



Sometimes also known as Blackbutt. Pale, very fissile. 



E. SlEBERIANA F.V.M. 



Pale-coloured, moderately fissile. 



E. Smithii R. T. Baker. 

 Pale, moderately fissile. 



C. White Mahogany — 



E. acmenioides Schauer. 



E. umbra R. T. Baker. 



These are intermediate in character between the two preceding groups, and 



Blackbutt (E. pilularis). E. umbra may be looked upon as an inferior quality of 



E. acmenioides. The best White Mahogany sometimes resembles Tallow-wood 



(E. microcorys). 



E. acmenioides Schauer. 



Pale-coloured, dense, somewhat fissile and durable. Often resembles E. 



microcorys somewhat. 



E. umbra R. T. Baker. 



Pale and somewhat resembling the preceding. 



D. Blackbutt — 



E. pilularis Sm. 



Pale-coloured, more or less fissile, durable. It is usually readily diagnosed by 

 the presence of narrow, concentric gum-veins, but sometimes these gum-veins are 

 nearly or wholly absent. As a rule, they are too narrow to cause deterioration. 



E. Stringybark — 



E. Blaxlandi Maiden and Cambage. E. macrorrhyncha F.v.M. 



E. capitellala Sm. E. Muelleriana Howitt. 



E. eugenioides Sieb. E. obliqua L'Hcrit. 



E. Icevopinea R. T. Baker. E. PenritJiensis Maiden. 



