CUPRESSUS 
NUTKAENSIS. 
Identification. —CUPRESSUS NUTKAENSIS, Lambert, Genus Pinus, & d. i, ii. p. 18 (1824); ed. 2, ii. p. 60 (1828); Loudon, Arboretum, 
iv. p. 2480 (1838); Hooker, Flor. Bor. Amer., ii. p. 165 (1840); Gordon, Pinetum, p. 66 (1858); Newberry, in U. S. Pacif. 
Rail. Rep., vi. p. 62 (1857) ; Hoopes, Book of Evergreens, p. 345 (1868). 
THUJA EXCELSA, Bongard, VSg. Stick., in Mem. Acad. St Petersb., vi., ser. ii. p. 164 (1833). 
CUPRESSUS AMERICANA, Trautvetter, Plant. Imagines, Flor. Russ., illustr. 12 (1844). 
CHAMH 2 CYPARIS NUTKAENSIS, Spach, Hist. Nat. VSg. Phaner., xi. p. 333 (1842); Endlicher, Syn. Conif, p. 62 
(1847); Lindley and Gordon, in Journ. Hort. Soc., v. p. 207 (1850); Carriere, Traits Gen. des Conif., p. 134 (1855); 
Henkel and Hochstetter, Synop. d. Nadelholzer, p. 250 (1865); Parlatore, in De Candolle’s Prodromus, xvi. p. 465 (1868). 
THUJOPSIS BOREALIS (Fischer et Hort). 
Engravings. — Foliage and Cones. —Trautvetter (op. cit.), t. 7 ; Newberry (op. cit.), vi., p. 63. 
Specific Character. —C. ramis suberedtis compressis, foliis acuminatis dorso carinatis haud glandulis 
instructs. Habitat in America boreali-occidentali montibus Cascade et Insula Vancouver et Sitka. 
A tree of “ moderate size,” with sub-ere6t branches, which, when the leaves have fallen, are slender, 
brown, and smooth. Branchlets 
Fig. 2 . 
Young leaves. 
Fig- 5- 
Male flowers, 
magnified. 
Fig. 6. 
Scale of flower. 
Fig. 13- 
® to eight, usually six, decussate 
Fig. 14. Fig. 15. Fig. 16. Fig. 17. p e j tate sca j es [hgs. 13 and 14] (not reckoning the two lowest minute ones 
inserted in the basal scales), which are umbonate, smooth, or radiately striated, the umbo terminating in a 
[ 28 ] A str °ng 
