CHAP. CXIII. 



CON I'FI: ii^i. PI'CEA. 



2341 



supposed to be the female, of the same age, was 4 ft. high. Plants, in the 

 London nurseries, are 5s. each ; and at Bollwyller, 3 francs. 

 1 5. P. GRA'NDIS Dougl. The great Silver Fir. 



Syaonymcs. Plnus grandis Doupl. MS., Lamb. Pin., 3. t. 94. ; ^bies grandis Lindl. in Penny 



En'rravi^ss "lAmb ?" t S^ wrjfc.SMS from Lambert's Pin us, vol. Hi., and fig. 2246., from 

 iSouglaf's specimens in'the herbarium df the Horticultural Society, and tl 



Spec. Char., $c. Leaves flat, obtuse, emargi- 

 nate, pectinate, silvery beneath. Cones cylin- 

 drical ; bracteoles ovate, acuminate, irregu- 



2245 



larly dentate, very short. (Don in Lamb. Pin.} 

 Leaves from f in* to 1 in. long. Cones, ac- 

 cording to Lambert, 6^ in. long and 3|in. 

 broad; but in Douglas's specimens the largest 

 cones are only 3^ in. long, and 2 in. broad,the 

 others being much smaller. Scale f in. long, 

 and | in. broad. Seed small ; with the wing, 

 fin. long, and |in. broad. A native of the 

 north-west of America; discovered by Dou- 

 glas, and introduced by him in 1831. 224-6 

 Description. A noble tree, akin to P. balsamea, growing from 170ft. 

 to 200 ft. high, with a brown bark. Leaves pectinate and spreading, linear, 

 roundish at the apex, emarginate, callous on the margin, quite entire; green 

 and shining above, silvery beneath, somewhat dilated towards the apex ; 

 1 in. long. Cones lateral solitary, cylindrical, obtuse, very similar to P. 

 Cedrus, but larger, 6 in. long, of a chestnut-brown colour ; scales transverse, 

 very broad, lamelliform, deciduous, stalked, incurved on the margin, quite 

 entire. Bracteoles ovate-acuminate, irregularly crenulate on the margin, 

 much shorter than the scales, included. Seeds oblong, with a coriaceous 

 testa ; wing very broad, axe-shaped, truncate at the apex, slightly scarious 

 and membranaceous, brittle, shining, pale. (Lamb, and Dougl. in Comp. 



7 M 4 



