456 J. H. MAIDEN. 



E. Oldfieldii with comparatively long, stout pedicels; the 

 rims are concave. 



19. E. oligantha Schauer. See Orit. Rev. ii, 160. 



44 Between Table Top Mountain and Artesian Range; 

 near Charnley River, West Kimberley, North Western 

 Australia. Tree of 40 feet; trunk to 15 feet; diameter to 

 1 foot; bark greyish, thin and smooth; timber reddish- 

 brown, hard, and very tough; foliage scanty; filaments 

 white; fruit campanulo-urceolate, under 4 lines long, rim 

 thin, valves 4, included. In appearance bears a close 

 resemblance to Sterculia decipiens W.V.F. On ferruginous 

 sandstone which partly overlies andesite." (Fitzgerald 

 MSS.) These notes supplement our knowledge of a little- 

 known species. 



20. E. saligna Sm. var. pallidivalvis Baker and Smith. 

 See Orit. Rev. iii, 59. 



A supplementary locality is Blackall Range, Q. (O. T. 

 White). It will probably prove to be widely diffused in 

 Queensland. 



21. E. Staigeriana P.v.M. See Orit. Rev. ii, 69. 



"Scented Ironbark." We know so little about the 

 restricted range of this especially valuable tree, that the 

 following notes by Mr. F. G. de V. Gipps will be useful: — 

 1. Between Wolfram Oamp and Thornborough. 2. On the 

 Old Limestone Goldfield (between the Palmer and Mitchell 

 Rivers); both localities are in the Cairns District, Northern 

 Queensland. 



22. E. tetraptera Turcz. See Crit. Rev. xxii, 33. 



This species has flowered for the first time in the Sydney 

 Botanic Gardens. Flower-buds were first observed in 

 February 1915, but the first operculum was not thrown off 

 till 29th August, 1917. The following notes on the flowers 

 may be useful : — 



