Thr Coastal flora. 
115 
■S.A. NAT., VOL. 
May. 1933 . 
XIV. 
The Following is a list of plants recognised in this area: — 
Pteridiuvi aquilinuni, Cheilanthes tenuifolia, a slender species of 
Stipa. S. elatior (?) (with broad leaves and villous nodes), 
jyickelackne snurcaj Neurachne dopecuroides (?), Cy penis ten- 
dlus, Scirpus nodosus, Cladium juncetim, Lepidospervia concavum, 
L, carphoidcs, Centrolepis strigosa, Burchardia uinbeUata,^ ddiy- 
sanotns Palersoniiy Dichopogon strictus, Xanthorrhoea seviiplana, 
Casnarina slncta. Isopogon ceratophylhis, Eucarya acuminata, 
E. Murrayana. Exocarpus cupressiiormis, Muehlenheckia ad- 
pressa, Rhagodui haccaia, Enchylaena tomentosa, Calandriiiia 
pygmaea, C, volubilis, C. calyptrata, Cletnatis micropliylla. Gassy- 
tiia pubescens, Crassula Sieherlana. Billardiera cyniosa, Bnrsaria 
spinosa, Acacia armala, A. spinescens^ A. Hgulataj .1. pycnantha, 
Correa rubra, Poranthcra micropliylla, Stackhov.sia monogyna, 
Fhomasia petalocalyx, Hibbertia stricLa, If. virgata, Pimelea sp., 
Leptospermum -myrsinoides , Kunzea pomifera, Melaleuca pubes- 
cens, Eucalyptus odorala, E. [asciculosa, E. rostrata, Calythrix 
telragona, Halorrhagis helerophylla. Didiscus pusill-us, Astroloma 
htnmfusum, A. conoslephioideSj Leucopogon parviflorus^ L. rufus, 
JAthospermum arvense, Myoporum insulare, Jl alilenbergia graci- 
lis, Qjoodema amplexans, Dampiera lanceolata, Erechtites pic- 
ridioides, Gnaphalium japonicum^ Cassinia spectabilis, a Heli- 
chrysum, Podosperma angustifolium and Millotia tenuifolia — a 
total of 69 species to which additions could unquestionably be 
Kliade. 
(8) The Cliffs 
a. The Cliffs at Marino. 
At Alarino the front rank of the Lofty Range peters 
out as cliffs on the sea-front. These commence at Kingston 
Park where they are removed somewhat from the sea by low 
dunes with a depression on their landward side. Immediately 
south, the low undulations descend by a moderately gentle slope 
!c tite strand and a quarter-of-a-mile further south again abrupt 
cliffs overlook the loose rocks that cover the intertidal area, the 
cliffs becoming bolder as HalletPs Cove is approached and 
broken by several small narrow gullies, some short, some stretch- 
ing back half-a-mile, down which water runs after storms. 
d’hese cliffs, as far back as the railway line, which at Marino 
is 161 feet above the sea and at Hallett’s Cove 256 feet, have a 
varied and interesting natural flora, not yet destroyed entirely by 
