422 



AKBOKETUM AND FItUTICKTUM. 



PART nr. 



" M. Maratray, inspector o*" forests in the department of Mount Jura, 

 sent, in 1807, to the Administration of Forests in Paris, a specimen of 

 this wood, which justified all that had been said of the fineness and homo- 

 geneousness of its grain. He also sent seeds, part of which came up the 

 first year, and the remainder the year following. The plants have made 

 tolerable progress ; but it remains to be known, whether, in fertile soil, the 

 tree will preserve the valuable quality of its wood." {Traite, 4-c., i. p. 51.) 

 The plants have been distributed among the different government gardens 

 of France ; and particularly those of Versailles, under the direction of 

 M. Bosc. At Bollwyller, there are plants of this species which, it is said, 

 can be furnished of considerable size ; and they are designated in the Cata- 

 logue, "^'cer opuHfolium, non A. O'palus;" price 1 franc 50 cents. 

 There was a tree in the garden of the London Horticultural Society, in 

 1835, which differed somewhat from A. O'palus, and seemed to us inter- 

 mediate between that species and A. barbatum, or, as it was then marked, 

 in 1835, A. trilobatum; but, whether it was the A. opulifdUum of Villars 

 and Baudrillart, we are unable to say. 



13. A. circinaVum Pursh. The roymdL-leaved Maple. 



Identification. Pursh Fl. Amer. Sept., 1. p. 267. ; Dec. Prod., 1. p. 595. : Don's Mill, 1. p. 651. 

 Engraving. Hook. Amor., t. 39. ; and our fig. 112., and fig. 127. in p. 4.54. 



S23ec. Char., Sfc. Leaves orbicular, rather cordate at the base, 7-lobed, 

 smooth on both surfaces ; lobes acutely toothed ; nerves and veins hairy at 

 their origins. {Don'n Mill., i. p. 651.) A tree from 20 ft. to 40 ft. high. 

 1 12 r','~^> Branchesslender,pendulous,and crooked; often 



taking root, in the manner of those of many 

 species of Ficns. Bark smooth, green when 

 young, white when fully grown. Leaf the 

 length of the finger, upon rather a short foot- 

 ' , stalk, membranaceous, heart-shaped, with 7 — 9- 

 t£ lobes, and 7 — 9-nerves, smooth above, except 

 F hairs in the axils of the nerves ; downy be- 

 neath, and in the axils of the nerves woolly : 

 lobes ovate, acute, and acutely serrated ; the 

 sinuses acute ; the nerves radiate from the tip 

 of the petiole, and one extends to the tip of 

 each lobe. Flowers (produced in April and 

 May) of a middling size, in nodding corymbs, 

 that are on long peduncles. (Hook. Fl. Bor. 

 Amer.) This is a very marked and beautiful species ; distinguishable, at 

 sight, by the regular form of its leaves, and pale reddish green colour. 

 Geography. On the great rapids of Columbia River. {Lewis, in Pursh's 

 Fl. Am. Sept.) Common along the north-west coast of North America, be- 

 tween^ lat. 43° and 49'=. (Douglas ; D. Scolder.) A. circinatum, like A. ma- 

 crophyllum, is exclusively confined to the woody mountainous country that 

 skirts the shores ; and there, among the pine forests, it forms almost impene- 

 trable thickets. (Douglas, in Hook. Fl. Bor. Amer., vol. i. p. 112.) 



Projicrties and Uses. The wood is fine, white, and close-grained, very 

 tough, and susceptible of a good polish. From the slender branches the 

 native tribes make the hoops of their scoop-nets, which they employ for 

 taking the salmon at the rapids, and in the contracted parts of the river. 



statistics. There is a plant of this species, in the London Horticultural Society's Garden, about 2 ft. 

 high ; and one at Messrs. Loddiges's about the same height. In Berkshire, at High Clere, there is a 

 tree which has blossomed and ripened seeds. 



as 14. palmaVum Thunh. The palmate-Z^awc? Maple. 



Identification. Thunb. Fl. Jap., p. 161. ; Dec. Prod., 1. p. 595. ; Don's Mill., 1. p. 650. 

 Engraving. Tratt. Arch., 1. No. 17. ; and onv fig. 128. in p. 455. 



Spec. Char., S^c. Leaves smooth, palmately divided into .5 — 7-lobes beyond 

 the middle ; lobes acuminated, oblong, serrated. Umbels 5 — 7-flo\\ ered. 

 • (Don's Mill., i. p. 650.) A native of Japan, and introduced in 1832. 



