114 DIPTEROCARPER. [ Dipterocarpus. 
Has.—Forms the principal constituent of the Eng and hill Eng forests all 
over Ava, Prome, Pegu, and Martaban down to Tenasserim ; also Chittagong.— 
. Apr.; Fr. Ma; ay.—L—SS. == Lat. Arg. CaS 
Remar as Woes bier aas hated darker eases heart-wood, rather heavy, 
lose grained, == 55 r much esteemed and used for — te 
can sor paki, etc. Tisida no BY but exudes a clear yellow 
. D. levis, Ham.—Kanyeng-nee.—A tree oe + 70— 
120 + 15—25), shedding leaves at the begin of HS., the young 
branchlets and stipules appressed ereyish-velvety ; bark grey, 
by 2 similar shorter parallel lateral nerves so as tigi iieaks the wing's 
3-nerved, the short easier ates hardly 3 in. long; nut 
beng octety 
tT. ott £ Arvacan, Pegu, and 
wittohes Eis to akan art Apr. ; Fr. May —s: ].—SS. = Metam. SiS. 
ReMARxKs.—Wood brown, much exposed to decay, and therefore little used 
besides for rafters and planks. Said to shrink very much, and to last not longer 
than for two years. a a superior “gigas of wood-oil in large quantity, and 
pes eS brown 
. Hass: 4 ‘Bl.—In every respect as former, but all parts, 
ae the ‘stipules, quite fa nowarivig calyx-lobes foalnats 
beset with minute stellate hairs, turning glabrous; the lobes of the 
fruiting calyx sprinkled with minute stellate te hairs, 3-nerved or 
almost 5-nerved. Probably only a variety of the preceding. 
Has.—In the cael S forest of the Andamans ; lao Tenasserim, Fr. Apr.- 
oe —s :1.—SS, = 88 
urbinatus, Gaertn n. f.—A tree (150—200 + 9—120+ 
on ; shedding leaves in ‘HS. ., the. young shoots and stipules 
greyish or yellowish pubescent ; leaves more or less oblong to ovate- 
oblong, obtuse at base, on a 14-2 in. long teers petiole, acumi- 
nate, 5-7 in, long, coriaceous, on both sides (and more especia 
along the repand borders) esi or above glabrescent with cyth' the 
exception of the coarser n , the nerves strong and parallel ; 
flowers as in D. avis, but the eaiyx velvety and the lobes greyish- 
