X. TILIA CER! TYVLIA. 65 
98. Tilia europea platyphylla. 
lande, Fr. (Vent. Diss., p. 6. t. 1. f. 2.3; the plate in Arb. Brit., Ist 
edit., vol.v.; and our ig. 98.) Leaves cordate, roundish, 
acuminated, sharply serrated, downy beneath ; origin of their veins 
woolly. Branches hairy. Cymes 3-flowered. Fruit woody, downy, 
turbinate, with 5 prominent angles. This tree is readily distinguished 
from T. e. parvifolia by its much larger and rougher leaves, and, also, 
by its rondher bark and hispid branches. 
* T. e. 3 intermedia, T. intermédia Hayne; T. platyphylla minor 
Hort. (The plate of this variety in Arb. Brit., Ist edit., vol.v.; 
and our fig. 99.) — Leaves intermediate between T. e. grandifolia 
99. Tflia europe'a intermédia. 
and T. e. parvifdlia. This variety is the most common in Britain; 
T. e. grandifolia in the South of Europe ; and 7. e, parvifolia in the 
North of Europe, and especially in Sweden. 
4% T.e. 4 lacinidta. T. platyphylla laciniata Hort.; T. asplenifolia 
nova Hort. (The plate in Arb, Brit., Ist edition, vol. v.; and our 
fig. 100.) — Leaves deeply and irregularly cut and twisted, scarcely 
two on the tree being alike. Apparently a subvariety of 7. e. par- 
vifolia. Height 20 or 30 feet. 
F 
