Eucalyptus eximia: Difference between revisions
CSV import |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Inc| | |||
Eucalyptus eximia, Schau. Mountain Bloodwood. Large tree: bark scaly, brownish or yellowish, smooth only on the younger branches: lvs. falcate-lanceolate, thick; lateral veins parallel and widely spreading but scarcely visible: fls. sessile, in small heads of a panicle, the peduncles angular or flattened; lid nearly hemispherical, pointed; stamens 3-4 lines long: fr. urn-shaped, with thin rim, about½in wide through the middle. Oct.- June. F.v.M. Eucal. 92.—A stately species with abundant showy bloom. Wood soft; useful only for fuel. | |||
}} | |||
#REDIRECT [[Corymbia eximia]] | #REDIRECT [[Corymbia eximia]] |
Revision as of 07:25, 26 September 2009
Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture |
---|
Eucalyptus eximia, Schau. Mountain Bloodwood. Large tree: bark scaly, brownish or yellowish, smooth only on the younger branches: lvs. falcate-lanceolate, thick; lateral veins parallel and widely spreading but scarcely visible: fls. sessile, in small heads of a panicle, the peduncles angular or flattened; lid nearly hemispherical, pointed; stamens 3-4 lines long: fr. urn-shaped, with thin rim, about½in wide through the middle. Oct.- June. F.v.M. Eucal. 92.—A stately species with abundant showy bloom. Wood soft; useful only for fuel.
|
- REDIRECT Corymbia eximia