New Alpine Plants. 107 
This fine species is dedicated to Andrew M‘Crae, Esq., as 
an acknowledgment for much support received from him in 
my travels. 
ScROPHULARINAE. 
23. Euphrasia alsa. 
Dwarf, annual; glandulously downy ; leaves sessile, in out- 
line ovate-cuneate, laciniate or pinnatifid ; lobes of the leaves 
oblong or linear, blunt; spikes very short, few-flowered ; 
calyx tubulose-campanulate, the lobes blunt, about as long 
as the tube; tube of the corolla hardly exserted, of equal 
length with the limb; the lobes of the lower lip emarginate, 
of the upper retuse ; anthers scantily bearded, the cells of all 
short and equally spurred; capsule orbicular-ovate, in front 
densely ciliated, inclosed, much compressed, few-seeded. 
Gregarious on the highest stoney summits of the Munyang 
Mountains—(6,000 feet). 
It differs by its annual root from all other Australian and 
Tasmanian species, by almost equally spurred anthers from the 
European, by the bearded anthers from the South American, 
and respectively by the same characters from the New 
Zealandian species. EH. Antarctica and revoluta are nearest 
to it related. 
24. Pederota densifolia. 
Stems procumbent, cespitose ; leaves thick, perfectly entire, 
cymbiform-ovate, ciliolate, sessile ,densely imbricated in four 
rows; flowers bibracteate, axillary and terminal, solitary, 
sessile; corolla twice as long as the calyx, glabrous, pink, 
their tube inside unbearded ; capsule obcordate ; seeds oblique 
ovate, convex at the back. 
On the highest rocky summits of the Munyang Mountains 
(6—6,500 feet). 
A most remarkable herb, variable in the number of divisions 
of the corolla, and in their form. 
Since it does not agree in habit with the European species, 
it may become the type of a new genus (Cymbophyllum). 
PROTEACEAE. 
25. Grevillea Victoria. 
(Sect. Calothyrsus.) 
Tall; leaves sub-coriaceous, undivided, long-lanceolate, 
