Lag erst romia.] 



LYTHUARIE^. 



03 



* Average of 37 and 44. 



The most valuable timber of Sylhet, Cachar and Chittagong, and in Burma the 

 most valuable after teak. It is used in ship-building and for boats and canoes, all 

 kinds of construction, timber and carts. The Ordnance Department use it for many 

 parts of their gun-carriages. In South India it is used for building and in Ceylon for 

 casks. It gives a resin. It is cultivated for ornament all over the hotter parts of 

 India and even as far north as Lahore. 



E 620. Eastern Diiars, Assam 



E 1228. Sibsagar, Assam 



E 2188. Nowgong, Assam . 



E 1272. Cachar 



E 410. Sundarbans 



E 710, Chittagong 



W 726. South Kanara . 



B 808. Pegu . 



B 3067. Burma (1862) . 



B 2717. Tavoy (Wallich, 1828) 



Ibs. 

 48 

 40 

 40 

 38-5 

 47 

 47 

 46 

 39 

 40 

 42 



5. L. macrocarpa, Wall.; Kurz i. 524. L. Flos-Regma, Retz; 

 Hook. Fl. Ind. ii. 577. Vern. Jarul, Beng-. ; Koonpymmah, Burra. 



A moderate-sized deciduous tree. Wood red, moderately hard, in 

 structure resembling that of L. Regina, but the bauds of white tissue 

 more prominent and large pores fewer. 



Burma in Pegu and Martaban. 

 Weight, 45 to 48 Ibs. per cubic foot. 



B 296. 

 B 3068. 



6. 



Burma (1867) 

 (1862) 



Iba 

 48 

 45 



L. hypoleuca, Kurz i. 523; Hook. Fl. Ind. ii. 577. Vern. 



Burm. ; JPdbdd, And. 



A lar<*e deciduous tree with thin whitish bark. Wood red, hard. 

 Pores very small to very large, in fine, wavy, concentric, anastomosing, 

 but sometimes interrupted lines of softer tissue, alternating with darker 

 wood of firmer texture, in which the very fine medullary rays are dis- 

 tinctly visible. 



Andaman Islands. 



(Growth slow, 10-18 rings per inch of radius. Weight, 41 to 50 Ibs. accord 



