14 ICONES PLANTARUM. 
Antiphonitos, in the island of Cyprus, should belong to the American _— 
L. styraciflua. The leaves are tufted, their lobes undivided, and the low 
nerve-axils hair ry. The only cert ainly-known indigenous ta that I am 
aware of for L. orientalis, is that cited above.-—D. OLive 
Fig. 1. ne ed branch, 2. Male flower. 3. Stamen. 4. Styles, surrounded by disk 
and sanuliedils . Fruiting branch. 6. Section of capitate fruit. 
Prate 1020. 
LIQUIDAMBAR FORMOSANA, Hance. 
HAMAMELIDEZ. 
enheteeome osana, Hance in Ann. Sc. Nat. Ser. 5. v. 215; foliis ple- 
ue in ramulis brevibus — ener s trilobis serrulatis subtus 
suave pilosulis et in axillis nervorum obs te barbatis, lobis latiuscule ovatis 
in acumen gracillimum gidaitis basi rdetis, lobis lateralibus patentibus ; 
fructu spinis pluribus si induratis capituli similibus) e limbo calycino 
inter capsulas oriundis arm 
Has. Formosa, Oldham / ( 88-1, Kew Distribution). 
Dr. Hance, in a memoir on this plant Sore s Journ. Bot. 1567, p. 110), 
dambar pretas of No merica. It is, however, soa to this careful 
ryge hg remark, that his identification was based, not upon specimens, 
but a comparison of the Chinese plant with the plate in Hayne’ 
is slight so far as the foliage is oo but the fruits are very diverse. 
While in both L. styrac faa and L. orientalis the margins of the adherent 
Fig. 1. Female inflorescence. 2. Styles ~ gaeemeng ‘4 
is oer — of the disk 
: meet ereopeserae 3. Staminode. 4. Vertical section : ached fruit-head. 
a ing e mer ee rc 7 and 8. Aber: aa 9 gel 10, er seeds, 1]. Sec- 
* The ovules are represented as attached to the dorsal suture of the carpels. 
