THE ROYAL WALNUT 83 



acterized by the abundant production of colossal 

 forms. 



In successive ages the climate changed, and it 

 became necessary for the plants that were unable 

 to maintain existence under the changed con- 

 ditions to adapt themselves in size and in struc- 

 ture to a less bountiful supply of foodstuffs 

 drawn from both soil and air; for the soil of the 

 temperate zone is relatively arid, and the air 

 probably became progressively less rich in car- 

 bon, owing to the permanent storage of vast 

 quantities of this substance in what ultimatelj'' 

 became the coal beds. 



So it came about that all the descendants of 

 the colossal plants of the Cretaceous Era 

 formed races that were dwarfs by comparison. 

 Here and there a straggling species, like the 

 California redwoods, preserved a reminiscence of 

 its imposing heritage. But in general the trees 

 that make up our forests in the temperate zone 

 are but insignificant representatives of a lost race 

 of giants. These, then, are the remote ancestors 

 that may be invoked in explanation of the rapid 

 gi'owth and relatively gigantic stature of our 

 hybrid walnuts. 



In this \'iew the exceptional growth of these 

 hybrids betokens reversion to remote ancestral 

 strains that for countless generations have not 



