100 J. H. MAIDEN. 



28. A. gonocarpa F.v.M. var. lasiocalyx F.v.M. "A 

 variety (unless a distinct species) with more per- 

 ceptibly margined phyllodia, the calyces and base 

 of corolla beset with short yellow hair." Yule and 

 Fortescue Rivers, Jones' Creek and George's 

 River. J. Forrest. (Prof. Ewart tells me it is no 

 longer in the Melbourne Herbarium). 



In Part II, we have 

 5. A. hippuroides He ward from three localities be- 

 tween 17 and 18° S. Lat. and 121-123° E. Long. 

 A. sentis and A. gonocarpa are new records. 



ii. Mueller, "Catalogue of plants collected during Mr- 

 Alexander Forrest's geographical exploration of North 

 West Australia in 1879." Proc. Roy. Soc. N.S.W., xiv, 81 

 (1880). These are King's Sound to Darwin, and are there- 

 fore both Northern Territory and Nor- West. More specific 

 localities are, however, given with each species. (In 

 Despeissis, p„ 20, there is an account of the results to Nor- 

 West Settlement of A. Forrest's Expedition). 



Mueller refers to the circumstance that, when the Par- 

 liamentary Report was published, only the Nickol Bay ta 

 King's Sound specimens were available, and says that Mr. 

 James C. Carey also assisted in the collection. He also 

 adds some hitherto unrecorded data from the A. C. Gregory 

 Expedition of 1856, of which he was botanist and which 

 mainly traversed the Northern Territory. 



The Nor-West Acacias recorded appear to be : — 



29. A. retivenia F.v.M. Margaret River. 

 15. A. Wickhami Benth. Margaret River. 



30. A. stipulosa F.v.M. East of the Oscar Ranges, 

 Humbert River. 



31. A. pallida F.v.M. Margaret River. 



So that retivenia, stipulosa and pallida are new records* 

 32. A. sclerosperma F.v.M. in Wing's Southern Science 



Record, ii, 150 (1880), is recorded from the Nickol River,. 



and probably from this Expedition. It is a new record. 



