CHAP, XXII. ACERA CEX. ACER. 4.23 
Branches and corolla purple. Fruit woolly. There are plants of this spe- 
cies in the garden of the London Horticultural Society, the leaves of 
which, as will be seen by our jig. 128., are strikingly distinct. The plants 
appear to be rather tender, and we would recommend them to be tried, in 
the first instance, against a wall. 
* 15. A. ER10ca‘RPuM Miche. The hairy-fruited, or white, Maple. 
Identification. Michx. F1. Amer. Bor., 2. p. 213. ; Don’s Mill., 1. p. 650. 
Synonymes. A, dasycérpum Willd. Spec., 4. p. 985.; A. tomentdsum Hort. Par.; A. gladcum 
Marsh. ; 4. virginitnum Duh; A. ribrum Wagenh.; white, or soft, Maple, United States; Sir 
Charles Wager’s Maple ; E’rable 4 Fruits cotonneux, or E/rable blanc, Fy. ; rauher Ahorn, Ger. 
Engraving. Desf. Ann. Mus., 7. t.25.; Tratt. Arch., 1. No. 8.; our fig. 129. in p.456.; and the’plate 
of this species in our Second Volume. 
Spec. Char., §c. Leaves truncate at the base, smooth and glaucous beneath, 
palmately 5-lobed, with blunt recesses, and unequally and deeply toothed 
lobes. Flowers conglomerate, on short pedicels, apetalous, pentandrous. 
Ovaries downy. (Don’s Mill., i. p.650.) A large tree, with pale greenish 
yellow seeds, and flowers tinged with pale pink. ‘They are produced in 
April and May ; and seeds are ripened by midsummer, from which plants 
may be raised the same year. Introduced by Sir Charles Wager, in 1725. 
Description. The trunk of the white maple is low, and divides itself into 
a great number of limbs, so divergent, that Michaux says they form a head 
more spacious, in proportion to the size of the trunk, than that of any other 
tree with which he is acquainted. The tree blooms early in the spring: its 
flowers are small and sessile, with a downy ovarium. The fruit is larger than 
that of any other species which grows east of the Mississippi. It consists of 
two capsules joined at the base, each of which encloses one roundish seed, 
and is terminated by a large, membranous, falciform wing. In Pennsylvania, 
it is ripe about the Ist of May; and a month earlier on the Savannah river, 
and in Georgia. At this period the leaves, which have attained half their 
size, are very downy underneath: a month later, when fully grown, they are 
perfectly smooth. They are opposite, and supported by long petioles; they 
are divided by deep sinuses into 4 lobes, are toothed on the edges, of a bright 
green on the upper surface, and of a beautiful white beneath. The foliage, 
however, is scattered, and leaves an open thoroughfare to the sunbeams. 
“The young leaves, and young germs, are very downy; but the old leaves, 
and perfect fruit, are glabrous.” (Hook, Fl. Amer., p.114.) The wood of 
this maple is very white, and of a fine grain; but it is softer and lighter than 
that of the other species in the United States, and, from its want of strength 
and durability, is little used. (Michaux, p.215.) In the United States, as 
well as in England, this species is often confounded with A‘cer rdbrum, 
which, in the leaves, it nearly resembles; but it differs in its inflated woolly 
fruit, expressed in the terms eriocarpum and dasycarpum, and in its flowers, 
which are produced in small compact axillary groups, and are almost, or 
quite, sessile ; while those of A, rubrum are produced in axillary groups on 
peduncles of irregular length (the shortest being about 1 in., and the longest 
about 2in.), and are succeeded by smooth compressed fruits. ‘ 
Geography. A. eriocarpum, in the Atlantic parts of the United States, 
commences on the banks of Sandy River, in the district of Maine ; and those 
of the Connecticut, near Windsor, in Vermont, are its most northern points. 
But, like many other trees, it is pinched by the rigorous winters of this lati- 
tude, and never reaches the size which it attains a few degrees farther south. 
It is found on the banks of all the rivers which flow from the mountains to 
the ocean; though it is Jess common along the streams which water the 
southern parts of the Carolinas and of Georgia. In no part of the United 
States is it more multiplied than in the western country; and nowhere is its 
vegetation more luxuriant than on the banks of the Ohio, and of the great 
rivers which empty themselves into it. There sometimes alone, and some- 
times mingled with the willow, which is found along all these waters, it con- 
tributes singularly, by its magnificent foliage, to the embellishment of the 
scene, The brilliant white of the leaves beneath forms a striking contrast 
