PINE FAMTLY 



edge of the treeless plain, the Tamarack is found standing a 

 tiny tree, when its companion the Black Spruce is clinging to 

 the ground, like a creeping plant, to escape being torn away 

 by the force of the winds. 



THE LARCH, 



Larix ciii-opfZa. 



The Larch which is extensivelv planted in parks and lawns 

 is not the American species but the European. The Euro- 

 pean Larch is the finer tree in general appearance and as it 

 naturally prefers loose well drained soil it flourishes where 

 our native species would die. 'I'he leaves are longer, they 

 clothe the branches more generously than those of the Amer- 

 ican species, the cones are larger and more abundant. It is 

 a tree of the mid-temperate regions as well as of the north 

 and is found in all the liill country of central Europe and 

 forms large forests in the Alps of Erance and Switzerland. 



BALSAM FIR. BALSAM. 



Abies hahainca. 



A conical evergreen tree, usually fitty to si.xty feet in height, with 

 trunk twelve to eighteen inches in diameter. On mountain tops .Tnd 

 arctic regions reduced to a prostrate shrub. Northernmost hmit 

 yet observed is 62' ; upon the Appalachians it ranges to southwest- 

 ern Virginia. Loves moist alluvial land. Grows rapidly, is short- 

 lived. Resinous. 



Bark. — On younj; trees pale gray. thin, smooth and marked by 

 swollen blisters filled with resin. On old trees reddish biown, 

 broken into small, irregular, scaly plates. Kranchlets pale jellow 

 green, pubescent, later they become pale gray with reddish tinge, 

 finally reddish brown. 



Wood. — Pale brown often streaked with yellow, sapwood paler-, 

 light, soft, weak. Coarse-grained, not durable. Used for cheap 

 lumber. Sp. gr.. 0.3S19 ; weight of cu. ft., 23.80 lbs. 



Winter Buds. — Greenish brown, tinged with red, globose, very 

 resinous. 



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