and the juvenile leaves are glaucous. Leaves ovate-lanceolate 
to ovate, coarse, thick, say io cm. long by 7 cm. broad in some 
specimens, petiolate, thick, venation distinct, rather more pro- 
minent on the underside, venation spreading, becoming more 
pinnate as growth proceeds, margin of leaf thickened and intra- 
marginal leaf distinctly removed from the edge, oil dots obvious 
in the earl}/ stage. 
The localities given for this rare species in the Flora Austra- 
liensis are "King George’s Sound or to the Eastward’’ and 
‘‘Franklin River,” all coastal localities. On my recent trip I 
collected it at Kalgoorlie and also on a wood line (about 70 
miles north of Kurrawang, while I have received it from Dr. 
A. Morrison (Hampton Plains, near Coolgardie, E. Lidgey). 
It may be useful to say that as compared with another 
“ corrugated ” species, E. corrugata .they may be sharply separat- 
ed on the anthers, E. corrugata belonging to the E. incrassata 
series and E. goniantha that of the E. oleosa series. 
E. goniantha has broad suckers and pointed operculum, while 
the suckers of E. corrugata remain unknown and its operculum is 
round. 
Var. Cldandi, var. nov. 
I now describe diffidently as a variety of this species a tree 
which, when flowers are available, may turn out to be a new 
species. I name it in honour of Mr. A. F. Cleland, of Kurrawang. 
who gave me facilities for travel on the private line of a company 
with which he is connected, and where I collected this and other 
imperfectly known trees and of Dr. J. Burton Cleland, nephew 
of the above, who made many botanical investigations in Western 
Australia before coming to Sydney. 
Following are observations made when standing before the 
trees, and valuable for that reason. 
(1) Lannin’s Timber Camp, nearly 70 miles north of Kurra- 
wang, where it is widely diffused. A Blackbutt. Bark hard- 
flaky and black in colour at butt. Timber cigar-brown, very hard, 
but not so tough as Morrel. 
(2) Goongarrie, 54 miles north of Kalgoorlie. A “ Black- 
butt,” 18 inches in diameter and 30 feet high, with bark fibrous- 
flaky at butt, the rest and all the branches smooth Branchlets 
glaucous, as likewise the whole of the saplings. 
Foliage more or less pendulous. 
Juvenile leaves ovate-acuminate, pedunculate, equally 
glaucous green on both sides, venation not conspicuous, except 
the midrib, intramarginal vein distinctly removed from the edge. 
Mature leaves narrow-lanceolate, 12 x 1.5 cm., being common 
dimensions, petiolate, dull green, coriaceous, venation not con- 
spicuous, lateral veins feather-like, intramarginal vein hardly 
removed from the edge. 
