142 



THE LIGNEOUS SYSTEM. 



T04. The cortical layers sometimes accumulate to a considerable thickness 

 (maple, hickory, oak), but are fiually rent and furrowed by tlie expanding wood. 

 In the cork oak (Quereus suber) they attain an excessive growth, furnisliing that 

 useful substance, cork. In birch (Betula papyracea) tlieso layers resemble paper, 

 long, abiding by their elasticity the expansion of tlie trunk. 



705. The medullary rays {medulla, pith) are those fine lines which 

 appear in a cross-section passing like radii from the pith to the bark, 

 intersecting the wood and dividing it into wedge-shaped bundles or 

 sectors. They consist of firm plates of parenchyma {inuriform tissue, 

 the cell resembling brick-work) belonging to the s.amo system with the 

 pith. 



106. The medullary rays are no less frequent in 

 the outer layer of wood than in the inner. Hence 

 their number must increase yearly, and a new set 

 commence with each successive layer, extending 

 with those already formed through the pu1).-^Lquent 

 layers to the bark, as shown in the diagram. (595.) 



707. The silver grain. In a radial section 

 (597, 598) the medullary rays are more conspicuous 

 as shining plates of a satin-Iiko texture, called the 

 silver-grain, quite showy in oak, maple. A tangen- 

 tial section shows their ends in the form of thin 

 ellipses. 



708, They serve as bonds to combine into one 

 firm body the successive wood layers, and as chan- 

 nels of communication to and from the bark and 

 heart-wood. They also generate, at their outer ex- 

 tremities, the adventitious buds. 



597, Wood of Oak; section Ion- 709 ThB CAMBIUM LAYER. Between the 



f:Tt;tZ:^l T^^I. libev and the wood there is formed in the 



iuots. spring, at the time of the opening of the 



buds, a mucilaginous, half-organized 



layer of matter. Its presence loosens 



the bark and renders it easily peeled 



from the wood. The cambium is a 



sap solution of the starchy deposits 



of the preceding year, now rapidly 



being organized into cells. 



710. This is the geuerative l.aybr 

 whence spring all the growths of the lig- 

 neous system. From this, during each 

 growing season, two layers are developed, 

 one of liber and one of wood, both at first 

 a cellular mass, but the cells with wonder- 

 M precision transforming, some into the 

 slender bast-cells of the liber, some into 

 the detted ducts and fusiform cells of the 

 wood, some into the rauriform tissue of the 898, Wood of Maple ; a modiillary rays i h 



ducts ; c, -w-ood-colla. 



