never, to my present knowledge, seen more than 15 feet high. It is a low scrub, 

 found principally on clayey clay-slate and schist-flats, leaves very fleshy, flowers in 

 huge bunches at end of branches, flowers very fleshy; pods large. The specimens at 

 Burrundie, however, grow to a height of 30 feet or more — both broad leaf and narrow 

 leaf form, and the tree has the appearance of the Cabbage Gum. The leaves are not 

 as large as usual in the scrubby form. Wood white ant proof." 



" Bastard Bloodwood. Now in flower, has rough bark to top of branches^ 

 narrow-leaved form. Another variety has bark like Moreton Bay Ash. Both have 

 reddish resinous splashes on bark. Leaves similar in both." Burrundie, November, 

 1915 (Dr. Jensen, No. 358). 



Leaves variable in size and shape, Brook's Greek; Pine and Horseshoe Creeks; 

 Pine Creek Railway (E. J. Dunn. R. J. Winters). "Large tree." Near Pine Creek 

 (C. E. F. Allen, No. 108). Narroioish leaves, open panicle. 



: ' Tree similar to 365, 366. Terminal branches erect; leaves more rounded." 

 30 miles south-east of Darwin (G. F. Hill, No. 367). 



" Broad-leaved form. Medium-sized tree ; trunk covered with rough scaly 

 bark; branches smooth, large sucker leaf." Batchelor, about 60 miles south of Darwin 

 (Dr. H. I. Jensen, No. 368). 



Mature and immature fruits. Umbrawarra (Dr. Jensen, No. 416). " On 

 hornfels country, north of Umbrawarra, and on blocky schist country at Woolgni occurs 

 a Bloodwood-like gum with broad leaves like E. Foelscheana, bark mostly smooth, but 

 a little fine scaly bark at base like E. jmpuana, seed pods larger and urn-shaped, having 

 a more marked rim than those of E. Foelscheana. Leaves, sucker leaves, wood, sent 

 under Nos. 417, 418, 419, and 420. This tree grows on both ridges and flats, and seems 

 variable in size and shape of pod. E. Foelscheana collected in same locality on a 

 small flat, has bark all rough. Seeds without rim, otherwise similar (No. 416)." 

 Umbrawarra (Dr. Jensen, No. 417). Fruits somewhat elongated. 



"Rough bark almost to top, large fruits." McKinlay River flats (Dr. Jensen, 

 No. 387). 



Edith Creek ; also Track to Katharine River, widely spread ; also coarse foliage, 

 fruits not large and hardly urceolate, near Katharine River (Prof. Baldwin Spencer). 



" Leaf like E. Foelscheana, bark like E. papuana. Associated with E. setosa. 

 Pedicellate juvenile leaves (? intermediate form). Woolgni (Dr. Jensen, No. 4-20). 

 Thin juvenile leaves. Woolgni, Cullen River (Dr. Jensen, 415); thin pedicellate 

 juvenile leaves, Cullen River, on banks (Dr. Jensen, No. 419). 



Robert Brown's specimens, collected 1802-5, and distributed from the British 

 Museum in 1876 under the labels — 



(a) (Islands of) Gulf of Carpentaria; 



(b) No. 4779, E. latifolia F.M. (E. compacta R.Br.), North Coast; 

 are E. Foelscheana. They are the lanceolate leaved form of the species. 



