461 



DESCRIPTION. 



CCCXXXVI. E. agglomerata Maiden. 



For an account of this species see Part LVII, p. 341 ; plate 232, figs. 1 and 2. 



RANGE. 



The following localities may be added to those already quoted in the above 

 Part :— 



New South Wales : — Near Rocky Hall (C. C. Robertson and W. A. W. de Beuze- 

 ville) ; Bago (Percy Murphy) ; Kurrajong Heights, " Large trees, timber largely used for 

 fencing, building and for sleepers" (W. Dunstan) ; Ku-ring-gai Chase, about | mile 

 east of Cowan Railway Station, " Trees 40-60 feet high, 1-2 feet in diameter, with a 

 thick fibrous bark on trunk and lower portion of main branches, upper portion of branches 

 smooth " (W. F. Blakely) ; about 2 miles north of Cowan Railway Station, there is a 

 narrow belt of this species in association with several small trees of Red Cedar (Cedrela 

 Toona) and White Cherry (Schizomeria ovata) : some of the trees are up to 100 feet 

 high, with clear, straight stems, and the foliage has a decidedly blue cast (W. F. Blakely 

 and D. W. C. Shiress); Mangrove Mountain, Gosford district, common on many parts of 

 the Mountain from Gosfoid to Mangrove Creek by the side of the old Wiseman's Ferry 

 Road (W. F. Blakely, D. W. C. Shiress and P. Murphy) ; Top of Mount Penang, near 

 Gosford (W. F. Blakely, D. W. C. Shiress and H. Bott, June, 1926) ; Hazelbrook, " A 

 very straight, tall tree, growing in the gullies ; bark stringy right out to small branches " 

 (E. Steinberger). 



Victoria :— " Small-fruited Yellow Stringybark," but when freshly cut and green, 

 the heart wood is brown in colour. Wangarabelle, also found plentifully between Genoa 

 and Mallacoota, and at Cann River, also at Orbost (H. Hopkins, 1915). I have seen only 

 the Wangarabelle specimen, which is typical of the species. 



