464 
FOXWORTHY. 
groups. In Java said to last longer in the ground than teak and to 
be untouched by insects. Posts, carts, agricultural implements, rice- 
pounders, bows and boat-spars and bed-plates for machinery. 
Gamb. 271, tab. VI. fig. 3; Nord. VIII; Van Eed. 103; Ridl. 136; Watt Diet. 
2:219; K. & V. 2:11-13. 
Cassia javanica L. Trenggoeli. 
Malaya. 
Moderately hard and heavy. Sapwood light; heartwood grayish or 
reddish. Used in house construction. 
Van Eed. 104; E.-Pr. 3 3 : 159 ; K. & V. 2:8-11. 
Cassia nodosa Ham. Plate XXIV, fig. 27. Turukop bumi. 
India and Malaya. 
Moderately hard and moderately heavy. Sapwood light-brown ; heart- 
wood red. Not a very useful wood. 
Gamb. 273; Ridl. 136. 
Cassia siamea Lam. (C. florida Vahl). Sibusuk (M.) ; wa (Cing.). 
Ceylon, India and Malaya. 
Hard and heavy, durable. Sapwood whitish, rather large; heartwood 
dark-brown to nearly black, in stripes of dark and light. Wood for 
building, helves, walking sticks, mallets, fuel. 
Gamb. 274; Van Eed. 105; Ridl. 136; Watt Diet. 2:223. 
Cassia timorensis DC. Anemene. 
India, Malaya, Australia. 
Very hard and heavy. Dark-brown, nearly black — much resembling 
the wood of C. siamea. Used for house building and furniture. 
Gamb. 274; Van Eed. 105; Watt Diet. 2:224; K. & V. 2:13-15. 
Prosopis spicigera L. Jhand. 
British India. 
Wood very hard and very heavy. Sapwood large, whitish, perish- 
able ; heartwood purplish-brown. Firewood. Structural work, furni- 
ture. Not durable. 
Gamb. 288, tab. VI, fig. 6; Nord. VIII; Watt Diet. 4:341. 
DALBERGIA TYPE. 
Eipple marks on tangential surface. 
Dalbergia cultrata Grah. Yindaik. 
Burma. 
Very hard and very heavy. Sapwood pale-brown; heartwood black 
with dark-purple streaks. 
Watt Diet. 3:6. 
