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Physical location:
Acc. 541, AN 3, 271/1887, Surveyor General's Department, State Records Office of Western Australia, Perth. 87.03.20Preferred Citation:
Ferdinand von Mueller to John Brooking, 1887-03-20. R.W. Home, Thomas A. Darragh, A.M. Lucas, Sara Maroske, D.M. Sinkora, J.H. Voigt and Monika Wells (eds), Correspondence of Ferdinand von Mueller, <https://vmcp.rbg.vic.gov.au/id/87-03-20>, accessed June 14, 2025
Melbourne,
20/3/87.
Herewith, honored Sir, I beg to send for your kind acceptance a few lithographic plates,
illustrative of W.A. Acacias from an Atlas of these kind of plants,
for which about 60 species are already lithographed, and in which the numerous species
of your wide territory will also be largely contained. May I ask kindly to find out
from flowering and fruiting specimens, whether it is the Acacia heteroclita, which
yields about Geographe Bay and Cape Leewin
the peculiar Gum, well known as different from the ordinary Acacia Gum of W.A. I should
like to know this for the new edition of my select plants.
1
B87.13.04, B88.12.01.
2
Cape Leeuwin? Both WA.
3
M's note on
Acacia heteroclita
in the next (1888) edition of
Select extra-tropical plants… (B88.12.01, p. 7) was unchanged from earlier editions.
Altho Cape Leewin was discovered and named, as you will be aware, already in 1622,
the vegetation of the vicinity is even now only imperfectly known.
For my work on the Australian Acacias my material is also yet very incomplete, particularly
as regards the far eastern species, of many of which I have flowering but not fruiting
specimens, and until the latter are gradually acquired, they cannot be treated in
the Atlas. Indeed collections of
all sorts
of plants even the minutest weeds, rushes, aquatics &c are particularly wanted from
your
far
eastern districts, not so much for actual novelty, but for tracing the distribution
of the species. I am thankful for all the aid, already afforded by the survey-department,
— and if the eastern settlers would all give a little local help, great strides could
be made for completing the elucidation of the W.A. Flora.
I am greatly beholden to you for allowing Mr King to furnish me with brief notes on
the W.A. surveys of 1886 for my next presidential address;
and I feel also much indebted to you for recommending for his Excellency's favorable
consideration the joint Exploration by W.A. & S.A. of the country N.W. of Lake Amadeus.
Should this not finally be carried out, it would still be a great advantage to W.A.,
if Mr Giles's
services were secured for one of the
far inland
districts as Crownlands Commissioner, as by his connections and influence in the eastern colonies he could
speed settlement much
4
H. S. King. See B87.05.03, p. 31. In B87.04.03, M described the plants collected by
King during his survey.
5
NT. See M to H. Ranford, 25 January 1887.
6
Ernest Giles.
Regardfully your
Ferd von Mueller
Is it not a pity, that a Gold-Medallist of the R.G.S. and a leading Australian Explorer
should not be in his element again!, one who has done so much for W.A. particularly.
Acacia heteroclita