176 



>' 

 DESCRIPTION. 



CCCXI. E. Pluti McCoy. 



In Prml. PeUcBontol. Vict., Dec, iv, p. 29, Plate xxxix (1876), also Couchinan's Progress 



Report, 1877, iv, p. 17. 



From Daylesford, Victoria, in the Deep Leads. 



Following is the original description: — 



Leaves usually about 5 or 6 inches long and in lines wide, falcate, acuminate, rapidly tapering 

 near the petiolate base; substance thick; veins delicate numerous, oblique, subparallel, withrather 

 few branches, or anastomosis; intramarginal one moderately close to the edge. 



The foliage of this species is almost identical in size and shape with that of the living Eucalyptus 

 globulus, but the veins are much more numerous, straighter, or less flcxuouSjand more nearly parallel in 

 the fossil than in the living analogue. 



DESCRIPTION. 



CCCXII. E. Kayseri R. M. Johnston. 



In Pap. and Proc. Roy. Soc. Tas., 1885, p. 322 (also ante, p. cxii), with Plate ii, 



'fig. 4. 



Tins will be found in a paper " Descriptions of New Species of Fossil Leaves from the 

 Tertiary Deposits of Mount Bischoff (Tasmania) belonging to the genera Eucalyptus, 

 Laurus, Quercus. Cycadites, etc" 



Following is fche original description : — 



Leaf lanceolate acuminate slightly bent, and very attenuate towards the acute apex; base 

 rounded and tapering about I; inches long and 21 millimetres wide; substance evidently thin, midrib 

 well marked; lateral veins numerous and very delicate subparallel. almost horizontal near midrib, the 

 most prominent being very indistinct and curving upwards at junction with intramarginal vein, the least 

 prominent usually anastomosing before reaching the same vein; intramarginal vein delicate, wavy, 

 following moderately close to the edge. This form is easily distinguished hy its most delicat- dose, and 

 almost horizontal v. -in and by its extremely acuminate apex. 



See also the .same author's " (ieology of Tasmania," p. 290, and Plate xxxix, 

 li^'. 8 (1888). 



