134 



VEGETABLE LIFE AND WORK. [SECTION 16. 



shown in Fig. 444, are only the fifteen-hundredth of an inch wide. Tliose 

 of Buttouwood (Fig. 447) are larger, and are here liiglily magnified besides. 

 The figures sliow the way wood-eclls are commonly put together, namely, 

 with their tapering ends overlapping eaeh other, — spUced together, as it 

 were, — thus giving more strength and toughness. In hard woods, sueh 

 as Hickory and Oak, the walls of these tubes are very thick, as well as 

 dense ; while in soft woods, such as White-Piue and Basswood, they are 

 thinner. 



411. Wood-cells in the bark are generally longer, finer, and tougher 

 than those of the proper wood,- and appear more like fibres. For example. 

 Fig. 44G represents a cell of the wood of Basswood of average length, and 

 Fig. 444 one (and part of another) of the fibrous bark, both drawn to the 

 same scale. As these long cells form the principal part of fibrous bark, or 

 bast, they are named Bast-cells or Bast-fibres. These give the great tough- 

 ness and flexibility to the inner bark of Basswood (i. e. Bast-wood) and of 

 Leatherwood ; and they furnish the invaluable fibres of flax and hemp ; 



the proper wood of their stems 

 being tender, brittle, and de- 

 stroyed by the processes which 

 separate for use the tough and 

 sleuder bast-cells. In Leather- 

 wood (Dirca) the bast-cells are 

 remarkably slender. A view of 

 one, if magnified on the scale 

 of Fig. 444, would be a foot 

 and a half long. 

 412. The wood-cells of Piues, 



448 



449 



and more or less of all other Coniferous trees, have on two of their sides 

 very peculiar disk-shaped markings (Fig. 44S-450) by which that kind of 

 wood is recognizable. 



413. Ducts, also called Vessels, are mostly larger 

 than wood-cells : indeed, some of them, as in Bed Oak, 

 have calibre large enough to be discerned on a cross 

 section by the naked eye. They make the visible porosity 

 of such kinds of wood. This is ])articularly the case with 



Dotted ducts (Fig. 451, 452), the surface of whicli 

 appears as if riddled with round or oval pores. Such 

 ducts are commonly made up of a row oflarge cells more 

 or less confluent into a tube. 



Scalari/orm ducts (Fig. 458, 459), common in Ferns, 

 and generally angled by mutual pressure in the bundles, 



Fig. 448. jNLagnified bit of a pine-shaving, taken parallel with the silver grain. 

 449. Separate wliole wood-cell, more magnifieil. 450. Same, still more magnified j 

 both sections represented : a, disks in section, b, in face. 



Fig. 451, 452. A large and a smaller dotted duct from Grape-Vine. 



