2l8 



CALLITRIS CALCARATA, R.Bk.— Botanical Survey of the Species {continued). 

 Locality. County. i Remarks. 



Morun|?iilan, Dripstone 



Mount Aubery, Parkcs 

 Mount McDonald 



Murrunindi 



Xarrandera 

 Ncwiiridge 



Wellington 



Gordon .. 

 Bathurst 



Brisbane 



Coo])er .. 

 Bathurst 



Nine Mile, Deepwatcr 

 Xullamanna 



Gough 



Arrawatta 



Oakey Creek, W'arialda 



Burnett 



Pialla\va\- 



Buckland 



Pine Ridge, via Onirindi 



Buckland 



Pokolbin 



Northumberland 



Quandong, Grenfell . 



Monteagle 



Quirindi 



Bucklan<l 



Round Mount, Inverell 



Hardinge 



Rutherfield. Quirindi 



Buckland 



Rylstone 



Roxl)urgli 



Salisbury Plains, Uralla 

 Sai)phire, In\'erell 



Sandon 



Gough 



fiouth Forlies ... 



Forties ... 



Spicer's Creek 



I,in''ilii 



A])]>arenlly there are thousands of acres of stony 

 barren ridges coveretl with stunted jiine inter- 

 spersed with box. 



Timber. — 40 to 50 feet in height, and from 2 to 2\ 

 feet in diameter. 



Resin. — Resin is e.xuded plentifully Iiy tlie Black 

 Pine. (A. Mclnnes.) 



Patches inters])ersed along the Harx^ey Range foi 

 several miles. (A.J. Bourke.) 



Two and a half per cent., or j^erhaps less. 



Timber. — Timber brittle, not much good. 



Resin. — Gives more resin than the White Pine, 

 C. glaiica. (J. Sullivan.) 



{\y. S. Goard.) 



(W. G. Heath.) 



Timber. — The tree is too knotty to he ol any 



commercial value. ■ 

 Resin. — If cut or bruised, the resin will exude by 



the gallon. If it is of any use, there is jilenty 



of it. (J. Hadley.) 

 About 100 acres. (John Surtee.) 

 2,000 acres. (P. Herd.) 



Scarce; and as a rule docs not grow to a large tree 



(J. T. Fitzpatrick.) 

 On all the ranges two-thirds of the country within 



10 miles of this ]ilace a])pear to be covered 



by these trees. (W. A. Kennell}'.) 

 Interspersed with C. glaiica. 100,000 acres. (E. W. 



McMahon.) 

 Fairlv common on the hills. (C. F. Lascron.) 



Aliout one-third of the district. 



Timber. — I'seless as a timber or fuel. 



Resin. — Exudes the greatest quantity. (Samuel 



Lewis.) 

 Very common, hundreds of acres. (.Sydney C. 



BjTnes.) 

 Not extensive: \'ery jiafchv: growing on the liill>. 



(A. A. McWhirter.) 

 See under Pine Ridge and Spring Ridge. (H. E. 



Baker.) 

 Near the town. (H. King.) 



On all the ranges. (G. McD. Adamson.) 



1,200 acres. 



Resin. — Appears to yield most resin after they have 



been cut with an axe or ringbarked. (C. H. 



Chawner.) 

 Within a 5-mile radius there is about 3.000 acres of 



pine. C". glduca and (' . ciilcarata. (Alex. Aikman.) 

 Within a radius of 4 miles there are only fi\-e 



patches of pines, each being of small extent. 



The largest is not mf)re than about 2 acres. 



(("has. Read ford.) 



