LARCH. TAMARACK. 



{Larix.) 



Larch was well known in the older time, and was prized in 

 Europe and the Orient. The two principal American species 

 are also called tamarack and hackmatack. The Eastern larch 

 or tamarack {L. americand) prefers peculiar low, wet areas 

 known as tamarack swamps. The Western tree (Z. occiden- 

 talis) resembles the European species and prefers dry places. 



Larch wood has always been regarded as ver)^ durable. It 

 is noted by Pliny and other ancient authors.* Vitruvius 

 mentions a bridge that, having burned, was replaced by one 

 of larch, because that wood would not burn as readily.t The 

 foundation-piles of Venice are said to be of larch. J It should 

 be remembered that the identities of ancient woods are not 

 always beyond question. American larch resembles, if it does 

 not equal, true foreign wood. The trees are tall and straight, 

 but so slender as to be seldom cut into lumber, almost the 

 entire supply being demanded for posts, ties, and poles. The 

 exceedingly durable wood resembles spruce in structure, and 

 hard pine in weight and appearance. 



Larch trees are marked by the fact that their foliage is 

 deciduous. The little leaves, gathered in tufts or bundles, are 

 of a bright pea-green when fresh in the springtime. The 

 appearance of tamarack trees when divested of foliage in the 

 winter is very gloomy. 



* Pliny, XVI, 43-49 and XVI, 30. 



\ Vitruvius, II, 9. 



\ Encyclopaedia Britannica, Vol. XIV, p. 310. 



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