10 Australian Plants. 
‘10. Asterolasia phebalicides. 
Branched; leaves sessile, oblong or obcordate-cuneate, 
retuse, on both sides tomentose, with flat margins; sepals 
golden-yellow, excelling twice or three times the length of 
the carpidia; petals wanting; lobes of the stigma filiform, 
only a little shorter than the hairy style; seeds opaque. 
On the stony declivities of the Grampians, the Serra and 
Victoria Ranges, particularly frequent on Mount Sturgeon 
and Mount Abrupt. 
11. Asterolasia trymalioides. 
Much branched ; leaves coriaceous, ovate, on short petioles, 
above glabrescent, beneath tomentose, with revolute margins ; 
sepals of equal length with the carpidia, twice or three times 
longer than the petals; lobes of the stigma clavate, much 
shorter than the smooth style; seeds shining. 
On the rocky summit of the Cobboros mountains in the 
Australian Alps, at an elevation of more than 6000 feet above 
the level of the sea. 
Here, at so apt an opportunity, I adjoin the diagnosis of a 
second and very remarkable species of Chorilena, occurring 
in the interior of New South Wales. : 
12.. Chorilena angustifohio. 
Leaves as well as the branches covered with stellate hair, 
approximate, oblong-linear, blunt, on short petioles, with re- 
volute margins, at length glabrescent, scabrous; corymbs 
capitate-terminal; bracteoles linear-filiform; sepals broad- 
linear, half as long as the corolla, externally somewhat hairy, 
connate at the base; filaments smooth, surpassing in length 
the narrow-lanceolate petals; style smooth; stigma puncti- 
form; germina five distinct, narrow, perburulous. 
13. Eriostemon hillebrandiz. 
Diffuse or upright; leaves oblong, ovate or heart shaped, 
truncate or short bilobed at the top, with recurved serrate or 
entire margin, on both sides smooth or somewhat scabrous on 
the surface; corymbs terminal; sepals minute, deltoideo- 
ovate; filaments of subequal length with the petals, as well as 
the style smooth ; anthers inappendiculate ; carpels obliquely 
ovate rostellate; seeds even and somewhat shining. 
A, brevifolius, diffuse, leaves ovate or cordate, 2-4” long, 
imperfectly toothed or with entire margin. 
On the rocky banks of rivulets in the Victoria Ranges. 
B, longifolius, strictly upright, leaves oblong serrate, up- 
wards of an inch long. 
