NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Berry [baccate] (figure 93) , a simple fruit in which the pericarp is fleshy 

 throughout and without a hardened inner coat. The fruit of the Grape, 

 Currant, Gooseberry, Cranberry, Banana and Tomato furnish good 

 examples. 



93 



91 



95 



2 Aggregate Fruits 



Aggregate fruits are those in which a cluster of carpels, all belonging to 

 one flower, are crowded on the receptacle into one mass, as in the Black- 

 berry (figure 89) taken as a whole. They may be aggregates of any kind 

 of simple fruits. But when dry and not coherent, the mass would simply 

 be described as a head or spike of carpels (or achenes, as in Buttercup, 

 Anemone etc.). 



