188 
No. 14. Part TV. See also vols. ii, p. 194; iii, p. 163 ; iv, p. 160. 
Melaleuca leucadendron , L. 
THE BROAD-LEAVED TEA TREE. 
(Family Myrtaceac.) 
Timber. —Sec vols. i, p. 96; ii, p. 194; iii, p. 163. 
“ No. 2. ‘ Belbourie,’ or Broadleaf Tea-tree, makes excellent flooring and 
lining boards, wears well under cover and keeps white appearance ; crooks made out 
of the roots very much used in building wooden vessels ; grows to 7 or 8 feet girth, 
bark also in layers similar to White Prickly Tea-tree. Both kinds practically white- 
ant resistant.” (Forest Guard McKinnon, Gulgong.) This tree is the origin of the 
place-name “ Belbourie,” between Gloucester and Tinonee. 
No. 24. Part VII. See also vols. ii, p. 197 ; iv, p. 162. 
Castanospermum australe , A. Cunn. 
THE BLACK BEAN. 
(Family Legtjminosai.) 
There is an interesting paper entitled “ The poisonous effects of the Black 
Bean ( Castanospermum australe ) on Cattle,” by S. T. D. Symons, M.R.C.V.S., 
Chief Inspector of Stock, in Agric. Gaz. N.S. TV., March 1911, p. 196. 
No. 25. Part VII. See also vols. ii, p. 198 ; iv, p. 163. 
Eucalyptus maculata, Hook. 
THE SPOTTED GUM. 
(Family Myrtacea:). 
PHOTOGRAPHIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 
(1) Giant Spotted Gum, Bodalla, South Coast, N.S.W. 
(2) Spotted Gum Trees on the road to Bateman’s Bay, South Coast. 
(3) “Forest Twins.”—Spotted Gum (A', maculata) and Ironba.rk (E. paniculata). Moruya District, 
South Coast. 
(Photos presented by Mr. A. E. Dyer, Government Printing Office, Sydney, on behalf of the 
Government Printer.) 
No. 28. Part VIII. See also vol. ii, p. 199. 
Eucalyptus paniculata, Sm. 
WHITE OR GREY I RON BARK. 
(Family Myrtacea). 
PHOTOGRAPHIC ILLUSTRATIONS. 
A fine specimen of Ironbark tree, Nowra District. 
(Photo presented by Mr. A. E. Dyer, Government Printing Office, Sydney, on behalf of the 
Government Printer.) 
“Grey Ironbark,” Wyong. Girth 12 feet, barrel 45 feet. (Photo, F. A. Kirton). 
For a fuller botanical account of this species, see my Grit. Rev. Genus 
Eucalyptus, Part XIII. 
