‘Engelhardiia. | JUGLANDACES. 491 
rianth consisting of 4 or 5 teeth or lobes, superior; styles 2-4, 
unequal. Drupes small, dry, seated on the enlarged wing-like 3 
lobed bract.—Trees, with unpaired or almost paired leaves. 
Leaflets entire, without net-veination, glabrous ; base of female 
bracts hispid . ‘ : ‘ ‘ ; J . “ . E. spicata. 
Leaflets serrate, rarely entire, with strong conspicuous net-veina- 
tion and pubescent beneath; base of female bracts glabrous . EZ, villosa. 
leaves equally or slightly unequally pinnate, while young along 
ith the rachis more or less densely pubescent, soon glabrescent ; 
rtly and bluntish acuminate or apiculate, ¢ artaceous, entire, 
and when full-grown quite glabrous, penninerved, the nerves thin, 
median one, enlarging in fruit; base of the wing-like bract in fruit 
densely yellowish-hispid, the median lobe up to 1} in. long, spatu- 
late-linear, blunt, 1-nerved, penninerved, and conspicuously net- 
veined, chartaceous and glabrous, the lateral lobes conform, but only 
sg half as long; nut the size of a pepper-kernel, hispid at the 
op. 
. 
, 
Has.—Frequent in the tropical forests from Chittagong, Pegu, and Martaban 
1. Feb. ; pr.—s.—SS8.=SiS. M ; ; 
down to Tenasserim.— Fl. etam 
Remarxs.—Wood white, soft. Good for furniture, turning, etc. Bark can 
be used for tanning. 
leaves while young shortly and softly tomentose, equally or unequally 
spikes on the same short panicle of only 23-3 in. length, the female 
one terminal, the male catkins about 2 in. long or shorter, covered 
with short minute bristles, the lobes of the female perianth mem- 
branous and flaccid, obovate-cuneate, sprinkled with hairs, the 
