30 
axillaribus, perianthio fructifero depresso, tubo brevissimo, 
lobis latis planiusculis . pubescentibus alâ integrá annulari 
membranaceá horizontali 5-6 mm. diam. circumdatis. 
Plain west of Leigh Creek (Copley) railway sation (W. 
Wii 
of some of the small-fruited EX villosa, Lindl 
Dedicated r . Cannon, of the Carnegie Institution 
of Washingto ment of Botanical Research), w 
fruits, collected near Port Augusta. 
x: eriantha, F. v. M. Leigh,Creek (W. A. Cannon). 
Leaves to 14 mm. long and appearing flat when dried, 
when fresh I have found them rather cigar-shaped and very 
slightly compressed. They differ from those of A. sedifolia 
in being shortly, but distinctly, petiolate. 
Chenopodium microphyllum, F. v. M. Mount Patawurta 
(Dist. S; E. H. Ising). a 
*Chenopodium Vulvaria, L. “Stinking Goosefoot. 
Tantanoola District, 1918; epe A in gardens and MN 
i pean wW , 5 
tinguished by its unpleasant and persistant smell of stale fish, 
has ly bee 
qon arp 908; C. Moore deaf EM 
tion it in his FI. N.S. Wales (1893), or F. M. Bailey in 
Weeds, etc., of Queensland (1906). 
PHYTOLACCACEAE 
C arpus pyramidalis, F. v. M. Ferguson wem 
‘Rear Moolooloo (E. H. Ising). Fruits ripe (October 9). 
Gree: 5 m. high, with straight, smooth trunk; branches 
- 
Ue n NYCTAGINACEAE. 3 H 
na repanda, Willd. Parachilna Gap (E. B- — 
