502 J. H. MAIDEN. 
It was collected by George Caley in the Sydney District,. 
(probabl y somewhere about the Hawkesbury) in 1800 — 1810, 
o9 being the British Museum number of specimen kindly 
presented by Dr. A. B. Rendle, F.R.Ss. Messrs. Baker and 
Smith record it from Barber’s Creek, in the Goulburn dis- 
trict, N.S.W., which is much the most southerly locality 
recorded. By far the most northerly locality is that of the 
following, sent by Mr. District Forest Inspector H. W. 
Mocatta from northern Queensland. ‘* Flooded Gum.—Near 
Atherton and throughout northern table-lands; found 
principally in high country on scrub fringes, very tall, 
straight barrel of large girth, carries black scaly bark from 
10 to 15 feet upwards from butt, thence upwards a white 
smooth bark, continually shedding outer bark in long fes- 
’ toons from branches downwards.”’ 
The specimen referred to under EH. saligna in B. F1., iii, 
245, as ‘* Richmond River, (Beckler)”’ is E. grandis. 
It is cultivated in Algiers, North Africa, under the name 
of EK. botryoides var., according to a specimen I received 
from Dr. L. Trabut, No. 110, in 1904. 
Var. GRANDIFLORA var. nov. 
Many species have a large fruited form, and it appears. 
to me that H. grandis is one of these. Fruits cylindroid, 
slightly urceolate, 1 cm. long, 8 mm. broad, calyx-tube 
usually with one marked rrm tapering into the flattened 
pedicel. Peduncles 2—2°5 cm., flattened. The fruits glau- 
cous, valves slightly exsert. EH. H. F. Swain, Carinda, 
near Woolgoolga, N.S.W., No. 47, associated with Blue 
Gum, Ironbark and Apple (Sept. 1905). | 
This is identical with or closely allied to (1) Bulladelah,. 
N.S.W. (A. Murphy, Jr., June, 1911); (2) ‘‘ Rough bark up: 
to limbs, but not Bangalay (EH. botryoides),’’ Green Point. 
near Gosford, N.S.W. (A. Murphy, July, 1910). 
