CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOTANY. 
23 
supporting nearly globular drupes, which are tomentose and 
I inch diameter. 
2. Coscinium Blumeanum, nob., Ann. Nat. Hist. 2 ser. vii. 37 ; 
H. et Th. 1. c. p. 179 ; — Cocculus Blumeanus, Wall. ; — ramis 
petiolisque brunneo-velutinis ; folds valde peltatis, lanceolato- 
oblongis, basi orbicularibus vix cordatis, dehinc gradatim an- 
gustioribus, apice repente acutis, 10-nerviis, nervis 2 primis 
subparallelis et fere ad apicem continuis, crasso-coriaceis, supra 
nitidissimis, nervis venisque transversis sulcatis, istis subtus 
valde prominentibus, cum pagina inferiore et petiolo longis- 
simo imo apiceque valde tumefacto dense cano- vel gilvo- 
tomentosis ; racemo supra-axilkri petiolo subbreviore, floribus- 
que sessilibus, dense aggregatis, gilvo-tomentosis ; ramis al- 
ternis subbrevibus, apice globoso-capitatis ; sepalis rotato- 
expansis, superne glabris, flavescentibus, subtus murino- 
tomentosis. — Penang, v. s. in herb. Soc. Linn, et Hook. 6 
(Wall. Cat. No. 4971 a). 
The branches of this very distinct species are clothed with 
dense floccose tomentum, and are ^ inch diam., with internodes 
3 inches apart ; the leaves above are very polished, very coria- 
ceous, and below are covered with dense white or yellow tomen- 
tum, mixed with a few brown silky hairs ; they are 12 inches 
long, or 10| inches from the insertion of the petiole, 4| to 7^ 
inches broad below the middle, the petiole being nearly 7 inches 
long, terete, barely a line in diam., but swollen for some length at 
base to a diam. of 4 lines, and thickened at the apex; other 
leaves are of the same length, with nearly parallel sides, about 
3^ inches broad, suddenly contracted on the margins opposite 
the insertion of the petiole by a short hollow sinus, and are 
thus somewhat panduriform, the petiole being 5 inches long. 
The male raceme, originating at some distance from the petiole, 
is simple, about 4 or 5 inches long, with ten or fifteen alternate 
curving pedicels ^ inch long, bearing rounded heads, 4 lines 
in diam., of crowded sessile flowers. 
3. Coscinium Wallichianum, nob. loc. cit. p. 37 ; — C. fenestratum, 
H. ^ Th. [in parte) FI. Ind. i. 178; — ramis petiolisque dense 
fulvo-lanatis ; foliis oblongis, acutis, basi obtuse rotundatis et 
subsinuatis, palaceis, 5-nerviis, crasso-coriaceis, supra omnino 
glabris, nitentibus, in nervis sulcatis, subtus dense sulphureo- 
tomentosis; nervis crassis venisque transversis valde reticu- 
latis prominentibus ; petiolo imo tortuoso et valde incrassato. 
— Singapoor, v. s. in herb. Soc. Linn., sine flore (Wall. Cat. 
4971, sub ‘^Cocculus Blumeanus”). 
The authors of the ‘ Flora Indies ^ have considered this to be 
