712 
Catalogue of New South Wales Exhibits . 
Department N.—Forestry. 
Group XIX- Class 113: Forest Botany—Illustrations of Forest Growth. 
CLASS 113. —.Forest Botany: Distribution of Forests; of 
Genera; of Species (Maps). Wood Sections and Her¬ 
barium Specimens of the economically important Timber 
Trees. Seed Collections (not Herbarium), &c. Illus¬ 
trations of Forest Growth, Typical Trees, Botanical 
Features. Anatomy and Structure of Woods (Veneer 
Sections and Plioto-Micrograplis). Peculiarities of 
Forest Growth: Cypress-knees; Burls. Diseases of 
Forest Trees and Timber; Injurious Insects. 
1357. COMMISSIONERS FOR NEW SOUTH WALES, Sydney. 
Photographs of New South Wales Forest Trees, prepared by Charles 
Kerry, Photographer, Sydney, and selected by J. Ednie Brown, 
Director-General of Forests. 
No. 1. Woolly Butt {Eucalyptus longifolia ), Bulli Mountain; 
height, 230 feet; circumference 3 feet above ground, 33 feet. 
No. 2. Black Butt ( Eucalyptus pilularis ), Bulli Valley ; height, 
280 feet; circumference 3 feet above ground, 59 feet. 
No. 3. Broad-leafed Ironbark ( Eucalyptus siderophloia), Newton 
Boyd Mountain. 
No. 4. Native Fig ( Ficus macrophylla'), Upper Richmond River; 
height, 250 feet; circumference 4 feet above ground, 136 feet. 
No. 5. Spotted Gum {Eucalyptus maculata ), Nymboida River, 
Upper Clarence ; height, 300 feet; circumference, 18 feet. 
No. 6. River Oak {Casuarina glauca ), Manning River, Upper 
Clarence ; height, 120 feet; circumference, 16 feet, 
No. 7. Turpentine ( Syncarpia laurifolia), Illawarra; height, 200 
feet; circumference, 30 feet. 
