72 



J. H. MAIDEN. 



wide, between three and four miles west of Wandi. As 

 far as known this tree occurs nowhere else in this part of 

 the Territory." This is a definite locality. 



6. E. Morrisi R. T. Baker. 

 Mount Patawurlie, near Moolooloo, S.A. (E. H. Ising, 

 3/10/18, through J. M. Black). The first record of the 

 species in South Australia. Some smaller fruits of this 

 specimen show a remarkable resemblance to some belonging 

 to E. dealbata A. Ounn. 



The round buds resemble those of Captain Baudin's Ex- 

 pedition 1802, provisionally referred to E. accedens at O.R. 



7. E. nitens Maiden. See O.R., xix, p. 272., also this 

 Journal, Li, 455. 



"A fine large gum up to 150 feet, with a symmetrical barrel of 

 three or four feet diameter. Rough bark about one third of the 

 way up, and then peeling in ribbons. Timber comparatively 

 heavy in relation to associated timbers, cuts of a deep pink, con- 

 centric rings clearly marked and rather narrow. Buds very 

 noticeable on account of their reddish colour. A noticeable 

 feature is that this tree forms a kind of ring round E. fraxinoides 

 area and then merges into the E. fastiyata forest." 



Elevation about 4000 feet. Tallaganda State Forest, via 

 •Queanbeyan (W. A. W. de Beuzeville). This is a useful 

 locality of an important forest tree whose range is imper- 

 fectly known. The Nundle reference quoted in this Journal 

 li, 455, for E. nitens is erroneous, the tree proving to be 

 E. quadrangulata Maiden. 



8. E. quadrangulata Deane and Maiden. 

 See O.R., xxiv, p. 76. 



The record for E. nitens as Nundle in this Journ. lt, 455, 

 is wrong, E. quadrangulata being the tree in question, and 

 it is requested that the note be transferred to that species, 



