64 THE OAK 
times cease within the first year’s bundle; but the dif_i- 
culty comes in of deciding whether a continuation occurs 
at a higher or lower level. 
The cells of the cambium, seen in transverse section, 
are rectangular in shape and arranged in regular radial 
rows, owing to the regular tangential divisions (fig. 12, 
n,m). In longitudinal sections they are found to be like 
the tracheids in shape and size, so that they stand one 
behind the other at the same level. Regarding the 
tangential series in rings, however, they are less regular, 
because the tangential longitudinal divisions of two cells 
side by side do not lie in the same tangential plane. 
This regular radial arrangement would be found in the 
xylem also, and is so to a certain extent, but it is dis- 
turbed by the differences in diameter which the various 
elements attain later. The fibres are most apt to pre- 
serve the regularity, but in many cases growth in 
length, and the intercalation of oblique septa, disturb it. 
In later years the length of the cambial cells in- 
creases, and hence the length of the elements in the 
wood. 
The phloém or bast of the individual bundle is sepa- 
rated from its neighbours by large rays of parenchyma, 
the cells of which agree with the secondary bast-paren- 
chyma rays. As these pass into the cortex they widen, 
as they do at the pith (fig. 12). 
The oldest portion of the phloém—that next the 
cortex—consists of a group of thick-walled bast fibres 
with their lumina nearly obliterated; these are long, 
