28 SIR DIETRICH BRANDIS—AN ENUMERATION 
Damp forests in the upper part of the Assam valley; Chitta- 
gong hills; Aracan; Lower Pegu; hills between the rivers 
Sitang and Salween ; possibly on the Andamans (King, 1. e. 99); 
Sumatra, where, according to Korthals, it grows gregariously ; 
Bangka. 
Burek, Z. e. pp. 198, 199, keeps Dipterocarpus Baudii and 
D. pilosus separate. But Korthals's specimens and his excellent 
figure agree perfectly with the Indian specimens, so far as leaves 
and fruit are concerned. Regarding the flowers, which of Indian 
specimens I have not seen, we have the description of Kurz, 
drawn up presumably from Burma specimens, which agrees with 
Korthals's figure, particularly in the “ calyx tawny tomentose 
from stellate hairs." Regarding the fruit of D. pilosus, Vidal, 
see under D. affinis. 
The specimens of Dipterocarpus collected by Sir Joseph Hooker 
in the hills north of Chittagong (cf. Himalayan Journals, ii. 
pp. 348, 353) mostly belong to D. turbinatus; but there are also 
others with hairy branchlets, petioles, and leaves, which have 
justly been referred to D. pilosus. These Chittagong specimens 
of D. pilosus are remarkable for their narrow, almost lanceolate 
leaves. 
7. DiPTEROCARPUS CRINITUS, Dyer in Hook. f. Fl. Brit. Ind. 
i (1872) 296; King in Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, lxii. pars 2 
(1893), 90. 
Probably over the whole southern portion of the Malay pe- 
ninsula. Malacca; Perak; Pahang (Ridley); Borneo (Beccari, 
nn. 779, 1883). 
8. D. ScoRTECHINII, King in Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, lxii. 
pars 2 (1893), 91. 
Perak. 
9. D. SKINNERI, King in Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, lxii. pars 2 
(1893), 91. 
Penang. 
10. D. Kerri, King in Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, lxii. pars 2 
(1893), 93. 
Malacca; Pangkore. 
ll. D. DuUPERREANUS, Lanessan, Pl. Utiles Col. Fr. (1886) 
297 ; Pierre, Fl. For. Cochinch. fasc. 14 (1889), t. 219. 
