218 



A CATALOGUE OF CONIFEROUS PLANTS, 



(D) minor, Loisleur. 



(E) variegata. 



59. P. pumilio, h Hcenke . . 



P. tatarica, Miller. 

 P. pungens, Scopoli. 

 P. sylvestris montana y 

 Aiton. 



60. P. Mugho, h Bauhin . . 



P. uncinata, Eamond. 

 P. montana, Baumann. 

 P. rotundata, Link. 



(B) humilis, Link 



P. pumilio, Lambert. 



(C) obliqua, Sauter. 



jP. uliginosa, Wimmer. 

 P. pyramidalis, Reuss. 

 ? P. Pischeri, Gardens. 



61. P. sylvestris, h Linn. 



P. altaica, Ledeb. 



(A) communis . 



P. geneve?isis) of Gar- 

 P. rigensis \ dens. 



(B) rubra .... 

 P. rubra, Miller. 

 P. scotica, Willd. 



P. scariosa, Loddiges. 

 P. squamosa, Bosc. 

 P. tortuosa 

 P. monophylla 

 P. horizontalis 

 P. haqenoviensis 



(C) latifolia. 

 P. Erzeroum. 



Gar- 

 dens. 



|62. P. Merkusii, de Vriese 



P. sumatrana, Jungh. 



- i 63. P. Banksiana, h Lambert . 



P. Hudsonica, Lamarck 

 P. rupestris, Michaux. 

 P. contorta y Douglas. 



A small bush. 



A lofty tree. 



A low tree. 



A middle-sized tree 

 (The Scotch Fir.) 



White- wooded. 



Red-wooded. 



A tree 100 ft. high. 



A branching tree 

 40 ft. high. (The 

 Scrub-Pine.) 



Alps of Europe, to 

 the height of 

 7500 feet. 



Pyrenees ; Alps of 

 South - Western 

 and Central Eu- 

 rope. 



Central and North- 

 ern Europe, up to 

 70° N. lat. ; and 

 N.W. Asia, as 

 high as 63°]S T .lat. 



Scotland, 



Sumatra, at 3000 

 to 4000 feet above 

 the sea. 



N. America, as high 

 as 64° N. lat. 



