422 CONIFERS. (PINE FAMILY.; 



v.tria bills, Pursh.) Dry or sandy soil, W. New England? and New Jersey m 

 Wisconsin, and common southward. Tree 50-6U high, straight, producing 

 a durable, h'ne-grained, moderately resinous timber, valuable for flooring, &c. 

 Leaves more soft and slender than in any of the preceding, dark green. 

 * * Leaves in threes (very rarely some in fours). 



6. P. rigicla, Miller. (PITCH PINE.) Leaves riyid (3' -5' long) dark 

 green, flattish,//w very short sheal/ts; cones ovoid-conical or ovate (I' -3j' long), 

 often in clusters ; the scales tipped with a short and stout recurved prickle. Sandy 

 or spare rocky soil, Maine to W. New York and southward ; common. Tree 

 30 - 70 high, with very rough and dark bark, and hard wood saturated with 

 resin (a variety sometimes called Yellow Pine furnishes much less resinous tim- 

 ber). P. serotina, Michx. is a form with ovate or almost globular cones. 



7. P. TcVdsi, L. (LOBLOLLY or OLD-FIELD PINE.) Leaves long (6'- 

 10'), riyid, with elongated sheaths, light green; cones oblong (3' -5' long); the 

 scales tipped with a short incurved spine. Barren light soil, Virginia and south- 

 ward ; common. Tree 50 - 100 high. 



2. Leaves 5 in a sheath, so/I and slender : scales of the cones neither prickly-pointed 

 nor thickened at the end: bark smooth. 



8. P. StrobUS, L. (WHITE PINE.) Leaves very slender, rather glau- 

 cous, the sheaths deciduous; cones narrow, cylindrical, nodding, a little curved 

 (4' -6' long). Cool and damp woods; common northward, extending* south- 

 ward in the Allcghanies, but rare in those of Virginia. The White Pine (called 

 in England Weymouth Pine) is our tallest tree, often 1 20 -160 in a single 

 straight column in primitive forests, and is invaluable for its soft and light 

 white or yellowish wood, which in large trunks is nearly free from resin. 



2. ABIS, Toum. SPRUCE. FIR. 



Sterile ca4kins scattered or somewhat clustered towards the end of the branch- 

 lets. Scales of the strobiles thin and flat, not at all thickened at the apex, nor 

 with a prickly point. Seeds with a persistent wing. Leaves all foHaccous and 

 scattered, sliort, frequently 2-ranked, Otherwise nearly as in Pinus. (Tin/ 

 classical Latin name.) 



$ 1. Cones erect, lateral ; the scales and the more or less projecting bracts falling frcm 



the axis at maturity : sterile catkins clustered: anther-cells opening by a transrccf 



laceration: leaves flat, becoming 2-ranked, whitened underneath, obtuse or notckiM 



at the apex. ( AHIES, Pliny, $-c. Picea, L., Don, London, not of Link.) 



1. A. l>als:imca, Marshall. (BALSAM Fin.) Leaves narrowly linear; 



cones cylindrical, large, violet-colored; the bracts obocate, serrulate, tipped with an 



abrupt slender point, slightly projecting, oppressed. Cold damp woods and 



swamps, New England to Pcnn., Wisconsin, and northward. A slender tree, 



of little value as timber, when young very handsome, but short-lived. Leaves 



i' or less in length, narrower and lighter green above than those of the European 



Silver Fir; the cones 3' -4' long, 1' broad, the scales very broad and rounded. 



Also called Ctniinhi linlsttm or llultn-of-Gilrad Fir. The well-known Canada 



wlsam is drawn from blisters in the bark of this and the next species. 



