72 
Yerranderie, in the Burragorang district, via Camden, also The Peaks. (R. 
H. Cambage, Nos. 1,263, 3,102.) Very similar to the preceding two specimens. 
(1) Var. sertiformis Benth. 
This is " glaberrima glauca" but, as Bentliam puts it " more glabrous" (i.e., 
not entirely glabrous) with larger phyllodia, not contracted at the base. 
The following specimens approach very closely var. sertiformis Benth. 
Phyllodia glaucous, rhachises very slightly besprinkled with short hairs. 
Murrurundi (J. L. Boorman and J.H.M). Mount Vincent, on the watershed 
between the Capertee and Turon Rivers, also By long Creek, and Taloobie (R. T. 
-Baker). 
Perfectly glabrous. Quirindi (W. MacDonald). 
Some specimens perfectly glabrous, others a little hairy. Gungal, near 
Merriwa (J. L. Boorman). 
Phyllodia glabrous and apparently typical, rhachis pale, slight tomentum. 
Warrumbungle Range (E. Betche, W. Forsyth). 
"Warrumb angle Range, on sandstone, 3 to 7 miles from the Coonabarabran- 
Bugaldi road (Dr. H.I. Jensen). Phyllodia glabrous and rhachises with thinnest 
sprinkling of hairs. 
Small trees of 6-8 feet, usually found at the foot-hills of high mountains and 
accompanied by such plants as Banksia marginata and Jacksonia scoparia. Forked 
Mountain (Warrumbungle Range) Coonabarabran. (J. L. Boorman, Dr. H. I. 
Jensen.) 
All these Warrumbungle Range specimens are very close to the type, if not 
absolutely identical with it. 
It also occurs in the south, at Yass. (W. W. Froggatt.) 
(2) Var. dysophylla Benth. " Softly villous, phyllodia large ; pine ridge near 
Croker's Range." (B.F1., ii, 356.) 
I have a fragment of the type through the kindness of Kew. 
Croker's Range was named by Oxley, and is situated in the Wellington 
district. 
The following specimens, which almost precisely match it, are from the 
south-east of the State, where there is much winter cold. 
Low-growing, loose-spreading plants of 3-5 feet, quite unlike the habit of 
growth of plants from Gungal and the Mudgee district, where the species is 
sometimes more pyramidal in habit. Velvety all over. Sides of Macnally's Range, 
Cooma district (J. L. Boorman). 
Not quite so tomentosc. Slate formation. Covvra Creek, 15-20 miles nortb 
of Cooma (II. H. Cambage, No. 1,876). 
