ANGOPHORA CLELANDI N. SP. 175 



3. With E. maculata Hook. We have undoubted affinities 

 in the smooth, more or less blotched bark, and also in the 

 timber, for both are remarkably alike in external characters. 

 But E. maculata (Plate 178, Part xliii) is a well defined 

 member of the Corymbosae, and the differences are very 

 great, as regards the organs. 





ANGOPHORA CLELANDI N. sp. 

 By J. H. Maiden, i.s.o., f.r.s., f.l.s. 



[Read before the Royal Society of N. S. Wales, November 3, 1920,] 



Frutex Mallee similis, cortice aspera, inflorescentia et foliis 

 immaturis + hispiclis. Foliis juvenilibus magnis cordatis ad lato- 

 lanceolatis, amplexicaulibus. Foliis maturis lanceolatis paullo 

 falcatis distincte petiolatis, supra glabris nitentibusque, infra 

 glaucis. Floribus majusculis 3 in umbella, corymbum irregularem 

 terminalem formantibus. Petalis ca 7 mm. diametro. Calycis 

 tubo 6 mm. longo, 7 mm. diametro. Calyce fructifera durissimo, 

 ca 7 mm. lato et sequilongo. 



A shrub, mallee-like, or several-stemmed, 3 or 4 feet to 

 12 feet high, bark rough, thickish, the inflorescence and 

 young foliage more or less hispid. 



Juvenile leaves large, cordate to broadly lanceolate, 

 always with the apex blunt, stem clasping (common 

 measurements are 7 cm. broad and long and 9 or 10 cm. 

 long by 4 cm. in greatest breadth). 



Mature leaves lanceolate, slightly falcate, mostly obtuse, 

 distinctly petiolate, with some tendency to shortly rounded 

 auricles, about 1 dm. long, and under 3 cm. broad, glabrous 

 and shining above, glaucous but not pubescent underneath. 



Flowers of medium size, three in each umbel, forming a 

 rather loose irregular terminal corymb. 



