44 
leaves are thinner and have the venation more marked than those 
of E. Woodwardi. 
4. E. Campaspe, S. Le M. Moore. 
The foliage is much smaller, the buds are nearly sessile, 
rounded in shape (ovoid), the fruits nearly hemispherical and the 
valves slightly exsert. 
5. E. pleurocarpa, Schauer (E. tetragona, F.v.M.) 
The foliage of this and E. Woodwardi are often a good deal 
similar and so they might be confused in the bush. The branch- 
lets and buds are a good deal more angular, and the calyx is 
toothed, the fruit is larger and more cylindrical. E pleuro- 
carpa belongs to the section Eudesmia;, and the anthers are 
different. 
6. E. pruinosa, Schauer. 
It has some general resemblance to the above species in its 
glaucousness and (sometimes) size of fruit, but the two species 
differ sharply in anthers and foliage (the leaves of E. pruinosa 
are sessile). 
Note added 21st September, 1909. A specimen in flower, in 
the W.A. Museum, dated 19th August, 1901, collected by Sur- 
veyor Anke All, Muir’s Continental Railway Survey, is this 
species. 
Eucalyptus Morrisoni , n. sp. 
Eucalyptus Morrisoni, n. sp. — A straggling shrub, about 8 
feet high. One patch seen 50-150 miles east of Kalgoorlie, Trans- 
continental Survey. Collected by Henry Deane, M.A., M. Inst., 
C.E. Consulting Engineer, May, 1909. 
Frutex ramis sparsis circiter 2-5 m. altus. Folia glauca, coriacea, con- 
ferta, orbiculata, 1-2 cm. diametro, amplexicaula, inconspicue venosa. 
Flores conferti in fine ramorum umbellis usque ad 7 in capitulo, brevissime 
pedicellati. Calyx subconicus, sine angulis, gradatim in pedicello, operculum 
simile forma magniuldineque. 
Filamenta sulphurea, antherea duabus cellis didymis, glandula magna. 
Fructus subcylindricus, circiter 6 mm. longus 5 vel 6 mm. latus. 
Capsula mersa sub orificio. 
Videtur E. pulvigerae forsan approximandus. 
Juvenile leaves.- — No vert' young leaves collected. Probably 
there is no difference between the juvenile and mature leaves. 
Mature leaves. — Glaucous on both sides, coriaceous, crowded, 
the branchlets rounded. All nearly orbicular and varying in 
diameter from about 1 to 2 cm. slightly amplexicaul, apex usually 
absent or slightly emarginate. Midrib moderately conspicuous 
for the basal half of its length, lateral veins anastomosing. In- 
cipient crenulations on the margin in some leaves. 
Buds and Flowers. — Crowded at the ends of the branchlets 
in umbels up to 7 in the head. Very shortly pedicellate, the 
common peduncle short also. Calyx conoid, not angular, tapering 
