PLATE 5. 
Lepiclodendron cmstrale, Mc.Coy. 
Fig. 1. Part of a small branch with rhombic scars, showing the scar of the vascular- 
bundle as a line along the middle of each rhomb. Mount Wyatt or 
Canoona ? 
Fig. 2. Dichotomously dividing branch, the upper part clothed with leaves ; the lower 
without leaves, and showing the rhombic scars of the latter. Mount 
Wyatt or Canoona P 
Fig. 3. Portion of another branch, showing the passage of the rhombic leaf-scars 
into the more compressed scars of the upper part ; the scar of the vascular 
bundle is situated on the upper angle of the leaf-scar. Mount Wyatt or 
Canoona ? 
Fig. 4. Part of a larger branch, with the vascular scar in the centre of the leaf-scar. 
Mount Wyatt or Canoona ? 
Fig. 5. Part of a stem, with large leaf-scars and apical vascular scar. Mount Wyatt 
or Canoona ? 
Fig. 6. A similar example. Drummond Range. 
Fig. 7. Leaf-scars, without any vascular scar. Mount Wyatt or Canoona ? 
Fig. 8. Portion of a large branch, with the leaf-scars compressed laterally or perpen- 
dicularly. Drummond Range. 
Fig. 9. Part of a branch, clothed with leaves, x 2±. Mount Wyatt or Canoona ? 
Fig. 10. Part of a somewhat older branch, deprived of the leaves, and showing the 
bases somewhat larger than in Fig. 1. x2J. Mount Wyatt or Canoona ? 
[Figs. 1-5, 7, 9, and 10 are copied from the figures of Mr. Carruthers. He does 
not, in his Paper, distinguish between the localities of the specimens ; they may, there- 
fore, come either from Mount Wyatt or Canoona. The repository of these specimens, 
also, is unknown to me, unless they be in the Botanical Department of the British 
Museum.] 
