202 
EXPLANATION OF PLATE 250 (IN PART). 
0. Flowering twig (cult. Botanic Gardens). 
H. Bud. 
1. Flower seen from above showing 
o. Corolla-lobes. 
6. Anthers, 
c. Stigma. 
K. Flower opened out showing 
a. Corolla-tube. 
b. Anthers. 
c. Corolla-lobes. 
d. Style with capitate stigma. 
L Part of flower showing two lobes of the corolla not yet separated, with anthers alternating 
with the lobes and long hair-like scales between them. 
M. Pistil 
a. Calyx adnate to the ovary. 
6. Style. 
c. Stigma. 
N. Two-celled ovary. 
o. Fruit. 
Besides the two figured, we have the following species :- 
1. C. latifolium. 
2. C. aUenuatum. 
3. C. lucidum. 
4. C. Imxi folium. 
5. C. didymum. 
6. C. vacciniifolium. 
1. C. latifolium F. Muell. Herb. 
A glabrous and apparently glaucous shrub, nearly allied to C. lucidum. 
Leives broadly ovate, very rigid, the pinnate veins and reticulations much more prominent than 
in C. lucidum. 
Flowers much smaller than in that species, and in looser cymes, otherwise their structure as well 
as the inflorescence the same. (B.F1. iii, 421.) 
Variously called " Mogil-Mogil," " Wild Orange," or " Wild Lemon." A small 
tree; the timber is hard and close-grained, but seldom used. It is, nevertheless, some- 
what ornamental, being pinkish, with streaks of a darker colour. Diameter, 3-6 
inches; height, 16-20 feet. 
Habitat. New South Wales. In the interior towards the Barrier Range 
(Nielson ?) in Herb. F. Mueller. 
South Australia. N.W. interior (M'Douall Stuart). 
The above are Bentham's localities. It is found in the Macdonnell Ranges 
(Northern Tciiitoiy), and has since been found in Kin Kin' Queensland (C. T. White). 
