K AM AH I 



nor Duboisia myoporoides. R. Br., sometimes called Corkwood 

 in N.S.W. and Queensland. 



Sources of Supply. Australia, New South Wales and Queens- 

 land. 



Physical Characters, etc. Recorded dry-weight, 48^ Ibs. per 

 cu. ft. Hardness Grade 3, compare Blackthorn. Smell none. 

 Taste insipid. Solution with water faint amber. Burns well 

 and quietly with little smoke and an agreeable smell : heat 

 expels a copious gum. 



Grain. Extremely fine but open. Surface scarcely bright : 

 pores shining. Rays and ground dull. 



Bark. "Light grey" (85). 



Uses, etc. "A tree attaining the dimensions of 150 ft. in height 

 by 3 ft. in diameter. : wood close-grained and tough, but easily 

 wrought. Highly spoken of by those who have used it (85)." 



Authority. Nilson (85) p. 124. 



Colour. Light brown or pink, quite uniform. 



Pores. Upon the limit of vision, size 4-5, little variation : 

 evenly distributed, occasionally a narrow zone poor in pores : 

 numerous, 40-90 per sq. mm. : arranged radially : many single, 

 pairs, and subdivided in groups of as many as 8 : oval : empty. 



Rays. Upon the limit of vision, size 5-6 : in appearance two 

 sizes, but the smaller are the attenuated ends ; uniform ; equi- 

 distant but apparently many small between the large ones ; 

 "ends" a pore-width apart; "middles" much more : together 

 about 12 per mm. : very lax and large-celled. 



Rings. Very faint, by no means clear : the boundary only 

 occasionally visible as a vague, darker band or a zone poor in 

 pores : much less distinct with lens than appears to the naked 

 eye. 



Pith. ? 



Radial Section. Pores visible but very fine and inconspicuous : 

 no contrast : the rays need the lens and are slightly pinker, 

 minute, inconspicuous flakes : the rings are just traceable with 

 care. 



Tangential Section. As the Radial, but the rays are minute, 

 inconspicuous, pinkish lines about o'2 mm. high. 



Type specimen authenticated by the Sydney Technological 

 Museum. 



No. 96. KAMAHI. Weinmannia racemosa. 

 Linn. 



PLATE VII. FIG. 63. 

 Natural Order. Saxifrages. 

 Source of Supply. New Zealand only. 

 Alternative Names. Towhai, Kamai (91). 



ill 



