130 
E. ABERGIANA TO E. AGGLOMERATA. 
In the following notes bark is described as it appears to the eye, but always 
subject to the distinction between living bark and dead bark as explained in Sec¬ 
tion I. of this book. 
In preparing the following list the author has bad the indispensable help of 
Mr. W. F. Blakely, Botanist and Eucalyptologist at the Botanic Gardens, Sydney. 
The list is based on Maiden’s Critical Revision. As here presented, it does not 
quite reach the 400 mark; but several species believed to be new await determina¬ 
tion and inclusion. Mr. Blakely makes a present total count for the genus of 405 
species and hybrids, and anticipates further discoveries. 
When Mr. Maiden was called away from his great work amongst the trees 
and plants the Critical Revision was still unfinished. The Parts necessary for 
completing Vols vii. and viii. were in manuscript, but not yet printed. To R. H. 
Cambage, one of Maiden’s most trusted botanical friends, and to W. F. Blakely 
fell the task of revising these Parts and seeing* them through the Press. Their 
work is progressing as fast as circumstances will permit. Where the Parts have 
not yet been printed, page numbers are unavoidably omitted from the references. 
Group numbers at foot of notes on certain species refer to descriptions in 
Section iii. of this book. 
NAMES AND BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS OF 
THE KNOWN EUCALYPTS. 
Eucalyptus Abergiana : F. v. Mueller. 
C.R. Pt. xli. 9; Vol. v. 9. 
A medium-sized Bloodwood, with coarse 
leaves, large, club-shaped buds, and large urn¬ 
shaped seed-cups (28 x 25 mm.). N.T., W.A. 
E. acaciaeformis : Deane & Maiden. 
C.R. Pt. xxii. 26; Vol. iii. 26. 
A medium-sized tree; bark dark, fibrous, 
rough, furrowed, like an Ironbark; juvenile 
leaves small, oblong; adult leaves lanceolate; 
buds and seed-cups very small (4x4 mm.). 
Timber reddish, fissile. N.S.W. 
E. acacioides: A. Cunningham. C.R. 
Pt. xi. 45; Vol. ii. 45; Pt. lxi. 12; 
Vol. vii. 12. 
A small, green Mallee, or small tree; juvenile 
leaves linear; adult leaves narrow; buds clavate 
to obovate, acute; seed-cups small, pyriform to 
hemispherical, (6x5 mm.). Dry parts, V., 
N.S.W. 
E. accedens: W. V. Fitzgerald. C.R. 
Pt. xxxiv. 99; Vol. iv. 99. 
A sturdy White Gum, 40-60 feet high, bark 
greyish or white; contains 40-50 per cent, of 
tannic principle; leaves thick, glaucous; buds 
blunt of medium size; seed-cups pear-shaped, 
(7-10 x 5-8 mm.). Timber reddish-brown, hard, 
interlocked. W.A. 
E. acmenioides: Schauer. C.R. Pt. 
ix. 263; Vol. i. 263. 
A tall, erect tree; bark fibrous, persistent; 
juvenile leaves large, opposite, sessile; buds 
small, pointed; seed-cups small, sub-globose, 
truncate to pear-shaped (6-9 x 6-9 mm.). Tim¬ 
ber pale, useful for many purposes. Coast dis¬ 
tricts of N.S.W. and Q. (See Group ii. 11.) 
E. adjuncta; Maiden. C.R. Pt. 1. 
297; Vol. v. 297. 
A tree 40-80 feet high; bark smooth, blotched 
somewhat similar to a Grey Gum; buds large, 
drooping; seed-cups medium, (10 x 11 mm.). 
Timber red. Rare. N.S.W. 
E. affinis: Deane & Maiden. C.R. Pt. 
xiii. 101; Vol. ii. 101. 
A medium-sized tree 60-80 feet high, bark 
half Ironbark and half Box; juvenile leaves 
glaucous, elliptical; buds elongated, acute; 
seed-cups medium (8-11 x 7-10 mm.), pedicels 
long, slender. Timber brown, interlocked. 
N.S.W. 
E. agglomerata : Maiden. C.R. Pt. 
lvii. 341; Vol. vi. 341; Pt. lxvi. 
308; Vol. vii. 308. 
An erect tree 50-100 feet high; bark fibrous, 
persistent; juvenile leaves elliptical to lanceo¬ 
late, hispid-stellate; adult leaves lanceolate; 
