307 



E. dealbata (Plate 134, Part XXXII). The very type specimen illustrates Diels : s 

 Law. It is in the opposite-leaved stage (fig. 3a, Plate 134). The leaves are 

 broadly lanceolate to almost ovate, but not many years elapsed before it 

 was seen that the normal leaves were lanceolate. 



E. decipiens (figs. 1-12, Plate 63, Part XIV). Eudesmiese. See Part XLIX, p. 276. 



E. fasciculosa (fig. 16, Plate 61, Part XIV). 



E. Foelscheana (fig. 4a, Plate 169, Part XLI). 



E. Forrestiana (fig. 2a, Plate 95, Part XXII). 



E. gamophylla (figs. 3, 6, Plate 147, Part XXXV). 



E. gigantea (fig. 2 ; Plate 85, Part XX). See Part XLIX, p. 276. 



E. Gillii (figs. 6-9, Plate 67, Part XV). 



E. globulus. See Part XLIX, p. 276. 



E. gracilis (fig. L, Plate 12, Part III). 



E. Houseana. See Part XLIX, p. 276, and Part L, p. 294, for remarks which 



should be referred to Diels's Law. 

 E. Kitsoniana (fig. 16, Plate 117, Part XXVIII). 

 E. Kybeanensis. See Part XLIX, p. 276. 

 E. leucoxylon. Do. 



E. macrocarpa. Do. 



E. melliodora. Do p. 277. 



E. miniata (fig. 3, Plate 193, Part XLVTI). Flowers at height of 2 feet. (W. V. 



Fitzgerald)'. 

 E. marginata (fig. 46, Plate 230). 

 E. Moorei. See Part XLIX, p. 277. 

 E. Muelkri (fig. 8a, Plate 116, Part XXVIII). 

 E. neglecta. A specimen. Spring Creek, Cobungra, IS miles from Omeo, Victoria 



(H. B. Williamson, 10th January, 1922), shows the juvenile foliage precisely 



as depicted at fig. 5a, Plate 115, Part XXVII, but with inflorescence hi the- 



axils of the juvenile foliage. 

 E. occidental-is (figs. 4a, 46, Plate 148, Part XXXVT). 

 E. orbifolia (fig. 12, Plate 74, Part XVII). May be a case of " flowering in juvenile 



stage " of E. piriformis. 

 E. papuana (figs, la, 36, Plate 155, Part XXXVII). 

 E. peltata (fig. 2, Plate 173, Part XLII). 

 E. platypus (fig. 56, Plate 145, Part XXXV). 

 E. pnmiosa (figs. 5-8, Plate 54, Part XII). 

 E. rubida (fig. 7a, Plate 110, Part XXVI). 

 E. Stuartiana var. grossa (fig. lc, Plate 102, Part XXIV). 

 E. tereticornis (fig. 1, Plate 129, Part XXXI). 



E. tetragona (fig. 7, Plate 188, and fig. la, Plate 189, Part XLVI). 

 E. Torelliana (figs. 4a, 46, Plate 160, Part XXXIX). 

 E. uncinata (Plate 62, Part XIV). See also the present Part, pp. 262, 263. 



Xon-recognition of Diels's Law has occasionally caused botanists to think that 

 these juvenile leaves, often far away from the root of the tree, indicate new species, or 

 has caused uncertainty as to the taxonomic value of this abnormally placed foliage. 



