( xviii ) 



Names. 



liemarks. 



110 



Dipterocarpus insigiUB, Thw. 



Ill 



112 



113 



114 



115 



116 



Dipterocarpus incanus, Roxb. 



Dipterocarpus costatus, Ocertn. 

 Dipterocarpus angustifolius, W. A. 



Dipterocarpus gonopterus, Turcz. 



117 



118 



Parashorea stellata, Kurz. 



oocSoooqL 



Thm ka t. 



Shorea obtusa, Wall. 



ooSops 



Thit jd. 

 (Phtya or Theya.) S. K. 



Shorea robusta, Gcertn. 



Fl. Sylv. Madr, t. 4. 



Shorea nervosa, Kurz. 



U 



100 150 



(An* 0). SS: 



90 100 + 15 16 

 Si S. Moister upper mixed forests, and 

 evergreen tropical forests. s : 1. 

 Wood yellowish grey, rather coarsely fibrous, 

 close-grained, and rather heavy. 



Large tree (C.) Yields, according to Rox- 

 burgh, the largest proportion of best 

 wood-oil. 



Tree (C.) Yields wood-oil. 

 Tree (0.) Yields wood-oil. 



1^ 12-20/3-4 (M'-T- 25000. 

 SS = Lat. Metam. Hill Eng forests. 



1. 



E 



120 150 



80 90 + 9 15 

 SS = Metam. Si S. 

 forests. s : 1. 

 Sap-wood, light brown. 



(Ps M' 1500/). 

 Evergreen tropical 



70 80 



(APr*P'M'- 



T 



Open 



" 40 50 -t- 6 7 



20000. SS = 00 not p. Lat. 

 forests and hill Eng forests. 1. 



Wood brown, nebulous, rather coarse and 

 light, loose-grained, n ' := 57 pd. Value 

 of timber equal to that of Eng, excellent 

 for tool-handles and planes, used also 

 for cauoes, &c. Yields a white resin. 



LMA ?) 1. 



Wood heavy, greyish dark-brown, close- 

 grained, hard ; the sap-wood of a some- 

 what paler colour, takes fine polish, br. w. 

 1308-1319 pd. The sal is in India the 

 most valued timber, and is used for beams 

 of gun-carriages, all parts of carts, hand- 

 spikes, perches of waggons, poles &c. 

 "Unequalled for railway sleepers, and valu- 

 able for engineering, ship and house- 

 building. Yields abundantly resin or 

 dammar. 



Tree (T) Yields a pellucid yellowish resin. 



