KINDS AND rORMS OF LEAVES. 



43 



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'il:!! 



liii 



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Exogenous Stems. 



SI 



of Flax-stem inagnifiGd ; and al-o in Fig. 81, -wlilcli shows the same structure in 

 a woody stem, namely, in a shoot of Maple of a year old, cut both crosswise and 

 len2;thwise. 



116. The difference becomes still more 

 marked in stems more than one year old. 

 During the second year a new layer of 

 wood is formed outside of the first one, 

 between it and the bark ; the third year, 

 another laA'cr outside of the second, and so 

 on, a new layer being formed each year 

 outside of that of the year before. The 



increase is all on the surface, and buries the older wood deeper and deeper in the 

 trunk. For this reason such stems are said to be exogenoi's or outside-growing 

 (from two Greek words which mean just this), a new layer being added to the wood 

 on the outside each year as long as the tree or shrub lives. And zo the oldest wood, 

 or Heart-wood^ is always in the centre, and the newest and freshest, the Sap-wood^ 

 at the circumference, just beneath the bark. 



117. The heart-wood is dead, or soon becomes fo. The sap-wood is the only 

 active part ; and this, with the inner bark, which is renewed from its inner face eveiy 

 year, is all of the trunk that is concerned in the life and growth of the tree. 



118. Plants with exogenous or outside-growing stems, especially those that live 

 year after year, almost always branch freely. All common shrubs and trees of 

 the exogenous class make a new set of branches every year, and so present an ap- 

 pearance very different from that of mo3t of those of the endogenous or inside- 

 growing class. 



§ 3. Of Leaves. 



119. Leaves exhibit an almost endless variety of forms in different plants; and 

 their forms afford easy marks for distinguishing one species from another. So the 

 different shapes of leaves are classified and named very particularly, — which is 

 a great convenience in describing plants, as it enables a botanist to give a correct 

 idea of almost any leaf in one or two words. We proceed to notice some of the 

 principal kinds. 



120. Tlicir Parts. A leaf with all its parts complete has a Blade, a Footstalk^ 

 and a pair of Stipules at the base of the footstalk. Fig. 82 shows all three parts 



