BOTANY. 63 



The individuals which we saw of the species were not handsome. They formed trees of 

 moderate size, having much the appearance of Thuja occidenlalis when growing under the most 

 unfavorable circumstances. The trunk was gnarled and twisted, and set with dead branches; 

 the foliage sparse and ragged, and the whole aspect disagreeable. The galbules, which were 

 numerous, were something larger than a pea, acd composed of four scales ; from the centre of 

 each a point projects. 



Fig. 28. 

 Fig. 28. Branch and galbules of C. Kulhatensis, natural size. 



The locality where we found this tree was near the snow line, and it is possible that it was 

 dwarled and. deformed by the severities of the climate. It is found on the low lands near the 

 coast and on Vancouver's island. Cupressus Lawsoniana, described by Mr. Murray, (Edinb. 

 Neiv Philos. Jour., 1Sj5,) is closely allied to this species, but differs from it in having six scales 



Libocedkus decurrens. The California white cedar. 



L. decurrens, Torrey in Smithsonian Contrib. 6, p. 7, t. 3. 



This tree is very "extensively distributed over California and southern Oregon, where it is 

 found in nearly all parts of the mountains of the interior. We found it more abundant and 

 attaining the greatest size at McCumber's, in northern California. It there rivals even the sugar 

 pine in diameter of trunk, though never obtaining an equal altitude. Many of the white cedars 

 about McCumber's are six to seven feet in diameter three feet above the ground, with an altitude 

 of more than one hundred feet. 



The general aspect of the tree is strikingly like that of Thuga occidentalis as it grows about 

 Lake Superior. The general form conical ; the trunk angular, or at least not cylindrical ; the 

 bark fibrous, and the lower part of the trunk usually bristling with the dead but persistent 

 branches. The foliage is also very like in its general aspect to that of the tree referred to, and 

 the wood is of similar character and of about equal economical value. I noticed about 

 McCumber's that the trees cut for the saw-mills, though externally apparently sound and 

 affected by a singular kind of dry-rot, by which the trunk was honeycombed 



