311 



E. rinerea 



E. Clelandi 



E. conica 



E. corymbosa 

 E. cosmophylla 

 E. cruris... 

 E. dealbata 

 E. decipiens 



E. dichromophloia 



i 



Part. 

 21 



Page. 

 21 



Plate. 

 89 



Figure. 

 6 



16 



215 



69 



86 



13 



132 



60 



6 



39 



303 



161 



lb 



21 



22 



91 



36 



59 



514 



242 



76 



32 



63 



134 



56 



14 



163 



63 



4c 



40 



342 



165 



6 



49 



290 



202 



3a, 36, 3c 



(_ (Juvenile, Intermediate and Mature). 



v ■ ■-, _ ("253 39 26 



E . euqenioides 8 < „ 



\254 40 18a 



E.eximia 42 68 172 lc and 2 



E.fasriculosa 14 162 61 15 



E. fastigata (see regnans) ... 



E. Foelscheana F.v.M. (" Common Bloodwood ") at Katharine River, Northern 

 Territory ; large tree, rough bark about halfway up trunk of tree, extending at times 

 to the large branches. Limestone country (C. E. F. Allen, No. 719). This is known 

 as the Narrow-leaved form. 



" Large Bloodwood," dark reddish, rough bark, right up to small branches ; 

 leaves generally shorter than No. 719, growing in sandy limestone country. Katharine 

 River railway terminus. Heart-wood very large, known to bushmen as " Ringed 

 (plenty of kino veins) Bloodwood " (C. E. F. Allen, No. 723, March, 1923). This is 

 known as the Broad-leaved form. / 



I have referred to this leaf- variation in Part XLI, p. 4. I believe that the broad - 

 leaved form represents the intermediate leaves, and the narrow-leaved form the mature 

 ones. The former is less " grown-up " than the other. The subject is important, 

 because trees which have a preponderance of broad or narrow leaves, as the case may 

 be, are by bushmen looked upon as distinct species. 



E.fruticetorum 



E. gomphocephala 



E.grandifolia 



E. grandis {E. saligna var. pallidivalvis) 



E. Griffithsii 



E. Guilfoylei 



E. hcernatoxylon 



E. hemiphloia F.v.M. Intermediate leaves described at Part 58, p. 435, also 

 " lower leaves " and " upper or intermediate leaves " of the above and 

 microcarpa and albens contrasted, p. 443. 

 M 



Part. 



Page. 



Plate. 



Figure. 



11 



58 



52 



76 



21 



22 



92 



26 



37 



199 



153 



2a 



23 



61 



100 



8 



16 



216 



71 



6a 



20 



311 



87 



lc 



43 



101 



177 



5 and 6a 



