View in the Forest on Mount Wellington, TasmaniaOil on board, no date. According to the Official Guide to the North Gallery, Fifth Edition, 1892; The large tree with dark foliage in the centre is a species of Beech-Birch of the colonists
733. View of the Organ Pipes, Mount Wellington, Tasmania. 733. View of the Organ Pipes, Mount Wellington, TasmaniaThese are basaltic columns, such as are found in many other parts of the world
730. A Selection of Flowers from Mount Wellington, TasmaniaIn the foreground on the left are the clustered red and bluish berries of Cyathodes glauca, Labill. the rosy flowers of a Pimelea, the lilac flowers of a Prostanthera
725. Blue Gum Trees, Silver Wattle, and Sassafras on the Huon RoBoth living and dead trees of the Blue Gum (Eucalyptus Globulus, Labill.) associated with Acacia dealbata, Link, and Doryphora Sassafras. Endl
720. Foliage and Flowers of the Blue Gum, and Diamond & Birds, T 720. Foliage and Flowers of the Blue GumThe Blue Gum (Eucalyptus Globulus, Labill.) grows to a large size, occasionally exceeding 300 feet; it inhabits Tasmania and Victoria
709. View from the Botanic Gardens, Hobart Town, TasmaniaGrass-Trees (Xanthorrhoea sp.) and an Oyster Bay Pine (Frenela rhomboidea, Endl. var. tasmanica) in the foreground
Kew Plant CollectorRBG Kew botanist collecting seeds on an expedition to Tasmania, Australia, 2005
715. View in the Forest on Mount Wellington, TasmaniaThe large tree with dark foliage in the centre is a species of Beech-birch of the colonists (Nothofagus Cunninghamii); and the & light-green trees, one on each side
Tree Ferns, Tasmania
Banksia Cone
Burned landscape, Tasmania
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