NOTES ON EUCALYPTUS. 495 
tains form has a precise replica in the Outer Domain 
juvenile leaves just referred to. 
What I have provisionally called the Blue Mountains 
form includes 6a plate 38 (Hill Top), and also specimens 
from localities as far removed as Gippsland, Victoria, 
Wombeyan Caves, and New Hngland, N.S.W., in which the 
texture of the young foliage varies from soft to harsh (and 
numbers of stellate hairs) according to age. 
At the same time, these Blue Mountains juvenile foliage 
specimens resemble those broad-leaved ones of H. eugeni- 
oides (see p. 497) to some extent—suflicient to put one on 
one’s guard. ; 
e. We have alsoa form from New England chiefly, so far 
as collected, at Wilson’s Downfall, Macpherson Range, 
Wallangarra, Armidale, etc. Alsoa large tree, which has 
broad-lanceolate up to orbicular juvenile foliage, (I have 
not seen any coriaceous), with buds as depicted on plate 37. 
The fruits are smaller than those of the type (i.e. are of 
the size of those of 1b, 4c, 8c, plate 38); sessile to pedicel- 
late. The pedicellate fruits are mostly flat-topped, and 
with a smooth, distinct rim. The shape of these rimmed 
fruits may be seen in 1f, plate 38, but in that case the 
fruits are sessile, the series depicted under fig. 1, however, 
shows an amount of variation in a South Australian form 
which is repeated in the New England, N.S.W. Specimens 
now under review. 
6. HUCALYPTUS BLAXLANDI Maiden and Cambage, n. sp. 
It is evident that Nos. a and b (E. capitellata) are funda- 
mentally different from Nos. c andd, which are conspecific. 
The latter are constituted a new species, and the name 
selected is in honour of Gregory Blaxland, who was leader 
of the first party to cross the Blue Mountains, where many 
trees of this species are to be found. 
