214 



On 24th April, 1919, Mr. W. F. Blakely showed me a specimen in the Botanic 

 Gardens, Sydney, with the lower leaves alternate. 



174. E. cornuta Labill. 



Orbicular, petiolate, rather thin, equally green on both sides, the intramarginal 

 vein at a considerable distance from the edge. 



80. E. corrugata Maiden. 



\ ery glaucous, and the rachis quadrangular. Leaves decussate, stem-clasping, 

 the midribs slightly decurrent, thin, equally glaucous on both sides, oblong or elliptical 

 to oblong-lanceolate, with a short mucro, small, say 5 cm. (2 inches) by 3 cm. (lj inch) 

 long. These juvenile leaves remind one of those of the E. globulus, Maideni, goniocalyx 

 group. Collected by Walter Gill, near Kalgoorlie, W.A. (J.H.M. in Journ. Roy. Soc., 

 N.S.W., Hi, 500, 1918.) Figs, la and lb, Plate 143. 



115. E. cosmophylla F.v.M. 



Petiolate, almost orbicular, 6 or 7 cm. in diameter, moderately thick, equally 

 green on both sides, the intramarginal vein at a considerable distance from the edge. 

 Fig. 3a. Plate 91. 



51. E. crebra F.v.M. 



Pendulous, narrow-lanceolate to lanceolate, thin, but thicker and more glaucous 

 in interior localities, the venation inconspicuous to rather conspicuous. Figs 4a and 4&, 

 Plate 53. 



351. E. cruris Maiden. 



" The juvenile foliage will probably be found to nearly resemble that of 

 E. Websteriana (which-I have not seen), but the mature foliage is quite different, being 

 constantly acute lanceolate to broadly ovate, and always opposite and sessile or very 

 shortly petiolate. Yorkrakine." (C. A. Gardner.) 



275. E. Culleni Cambage. 



Add to Part 48, p. 233 : Not seen in the earliest stage. Shortly petiolate, 

 thinnish, equally green on both sides, venation not conspicuous. Fig. 2a, Plate 198. 



165. E. dealbata A. Cunn. 

 With long peduncles, glaucous, particularly so on the sharply quadrangular 

 axes, nearly orbicular, nearly 8 cm. in diameter, often emarginate, not very thick, 

 secondary veins abundant and fairly parallel, but not close together and approximately 

 at an angle of 40 to 50 degrees with the midrib. Fig. 4, Plate 135. 



