( *3 ) 
Latin Names. 
2d Ed. Lin.Sp. 
Englifh Names. 
j Obfervations. 
Quercus TEgilops 
p. 1414 
Avellanea or Vale- 
nida oak 
The cups of the acorns, which 
are very large, ufed here in 
dying, grow in Greece and 
Natolia, particularly, in the 
Ifland of Zia in the Archi- 
pelago, where Tournefort 
fays they gather in one year 
5000 hundred weight. 
Quercus Gallifera 
Parkinfon 1386 
Gall-bearing oak 
Galls from Aleppo and Smyr- 
na. This oak is not yet 
known in England : The 
Acorns may be brought 
over in Wax, and fent to 
the Floridas, Georgia, and 
S. Carolina. 
CarthamusTinc- ] 
tonus 
Lin. Sp. 1 162 
Safflower 
Much ufed in dying, grows 
in Egypt. 
Rhamnus catharti- 
cus minor 
Rhamnus Saxatilis 
Tournft. 593 
Lin. Sp. 1671 
Buckthorns that 
produce yellow ber- 
ries of Avignon. 
Ufed by painters and dyers ; 
both thefe plants produce 
berries fit for this purpole. 
Olea Europea 
p. 11 
Olives of feveral va- 
rieties 
Foroil ; thefe grow in France, 
Spain, and Italy. Young 
Plants and ripe Fruit of the 
French and Spanifh forts, 
may be brought from 
thence. 
Sefamum Orientale 
p. 883 
Oily grain 
Propagated in the Levant for 
oil, which does not foon 
grow rancid by keeping. 
GofTypium her- 1 
baceum [ 
Goflypium hirfu- j 
turn J 
P 975 
T wo forth of annual 
cotton 
Both thefe kinds of annual 
cotton are yearly fown in 
Turkey, and would grow 
well in the warm climates 
of N. America, as the Flo- 
ridas, Georgia, Carolina, 
and Virginia. 
Sailed* 
