84 
Following are from the Blue Mountains and Bathurst district :—Wentworth 
Falls (W. Forsyth) ; Mount Victoria (J.1T.M.); Clarence Siding (J.H.M. and J. L. 
Boorman); Clarence to Wolgan (H. Deane) ; Jenolan Caves (J.H.M.) ; Eskbank 
(R. H. Cambage) ; Mount Blaxland to Rydal (R. H. Cambage and J.H.M.); near 
Peel (Bathurst to Sofala), with very small phyllodia (R. H. Cambage and J.H.M.). 
Apsley, Bathurst (R. H. Cambage). Hooker’s leones, t. 164, was drawn 
from a specimen remarkably similar to this. 
I have also received a specimen from Kew, labelled A. buxifolia (so named 
by Bentham) “ collected Blue Mountains, probably Fraser.” It is the form figured 
at t. 384, Loddiges’ Bot. Cab., and I do not see in what way it can be separated from 
the rest of the Blue Mountains lunata. 
Following are.western and south-western localities:—Canoblas, Orange (H. I. 
Jensen); Bnmberry, near Molong (J. L. Boorman); Cumnock, 5-6 feet, found in 
stony places (W. R. Glasson); Parkes Water Supply (J.H.M.); Mount McDonald 
(J. L. Boorman and J.H.M.); Warrumbungle Ranges (W. Forsyth) ; Coonabara- 
bran (J. L. Boorman); Timor Rock, Coonabarabran (J. L. Boorman); Dubbo (R. 
H. Cambage, No. 1,056); 3-5 feet, common (J. L. Boorman); Peak Hill (J. L. 
Boorman); Wyalong (J. E. Carne), to be confirmed with pods. 
Blue Bush, considered almost as great a pest as Black Wattle (A. hukeoides) 
in the Lachlan and Riverina districts (the late Forester Taylor, Wagga Wagga) ; 
Mudgee (N. Taylor); Kelgoola, source of the Cudgegong River, 25 miles east of 
Rylstone (R. T. Baker). 
# . 
The following three plants were formerly named neglecta, and are all from 
the Mudgee district:— 
(a) Taloobie, near Bylong Creek, 25 miles north of Rylstone; also 
Camboon, 7 miles north of Rylstone (R. T. Baker). 
(b) Mudgee district, “ Lanky Acacia,” 8-10 feet high, with a thin 
stem (J. D. Cox). 
(c) Gulgong (J. L. Boorman and J.H.M.). 
Following are New England localities :— 
Howell (J. L. Boorman and J.H.M.) ; Warialda, apparently rare; narrow 
phyllodes (Rev. H. M. R. Rupp, J. L. Boorman) ; New England (C. Stuart). 
Queensland. 
Stanthorpe. “Not plentiful, and does not grow so high as in warmer 
districts.” (J. L. Boorman.) 
