Cedrus ae 
a 
Quercus Ilex below, with which the cedar slightly mingles. The cedar forest 
occupies 2300 acres, four-fifths of this being on the north slope and one-fifth on 
the south slope, and consists of a mixture in varying proportions of cedar and 
Quercus Mirbeckit, the latter a beautiful tall tree with semi-evergreen foliage, often 
attaining 12 feet in girth, This mixed forest is nowhere very dense, except where 
there are young stands, and grows upon sandstone—the undergrowth being chiefly 
Rosa and Rubus, with Juniperus in the lower zone. The tallest cedar does not, I 
believe, exceed over 120 feet ; and the largest, which I measured and photographed 
(Plate 136, 8), are La Soltane, 98 feet high by 24 feet in girth, and Le Massaoud 
(Plate 136, a), 108 feet by 23 feet. Trees of peculiar shape are common; one, 108 
feet by 19 feet, dividing into two stems at eight feet up; and another, Le Cédre 
Parasol, which stands on a rocky promontory, being a low tree with a peculiar broad- 
shaped umbrella-like crown. Around the forester’s house, Le Rond Point, at 4600 
feet, there is a plateau of some extent, with many fine old trees having the habit of 
the Lebanon cedar as we see it in England.1 No felling is done at present in this 
forest, which is rapidly improving in value owing to the entirely successful natural 
regeneration, cedars being present in all stages of growth. 
The wood of the cedar, though without resin-canals, contains a quantity of 
resin, which gives it a peculiar, penetrating, and distinctive odour.2 At Batna, 
fibanol, a kind of resin, is obtained by distillation of the sawdust of old trees. This 
product is very valuable in the treatment of inflammation of the mucous membranes, 
and is said to be curative in influenza. Cedar wood contains a large amount of 
white sapwood, 25 to 50 annual rings, with a brown or brownish-yellow heartwood. 
The heartwood is homogeneous and fine in the grain, and takes an admirable polish. 
It lasts indefinitely, trees which were cut down fifty years ago in the forest at Batna 
remaining still on the ground quite sound, and when not exposed to the air is 
imperishable. Pieces of cedar wood have been found in tombs which are supposed 
to belong to the Punic period, and portions of ancient mosques built of cedar are in 
perfect condition. Placed in water, the heartwood becomes very hard; and vats 
made of it, which have been buried in sand for thirty years, are not only well 
preserved, but cannot be cut by an axe. The wood of dead trees can be used at 
once, but that of living trees requires to be seasoned carefully for six or twelve 
months. Though the timber is used in building, it is rather heavy for that purpose, 
and has no great elasticity or resistance to flexion under a heavy weight. It is, 
however, well suited for the finest kinds of cabinet-making. (A. H.) 
CULTIVATION 
The seed ripens in most seasons in England at least, as well as that of the 
Lebanon cedar, and will sometimes come up naturally near the parent trees, as at 
Cooper’s Hill near Windsor, from whence I transplanted two self-sown seedlings to 
my own garden. 
1 An excellent illustration in Garden and Forest, viii. 335 (1895), shows the flat-topped habit of mature trees in their 
native forest. ; 5) 
2 The odour disappears after exposure to the air for a few years, and is not noticeable in the cedar furniture which is so 
common in the houses at Batna and Téniet-el-Haad. Cf. Lefebvre, Les Foréts de 1’ Algérie, 350 (1900), 
