ReportCalifornia State Print. Office, 1890 |
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Abies Acacia Acacia pycnantha alpine bark become Board of Forestry botanical botanist bracts branches branchlets brown California Cedar characters Cluster Pine coast Coast Redwood Cone-bearers County cultivation Cupressus Cypress DEAR SIR distributed Douglas Spruce eastern elevations Engelmann Eucalyptus Eucalyptus obliqua favorable feet high feet in diameter fire foliage forest trees four fruit genera genus gigantea green groves growth height Hooker hundred and fifty inches long J. G. LEMMON Juniper lands Larch leaves limbs lines long lumber male flowers maturity Monterey Monterey Cypress Mount Mountains nearly northern Northwest Oregon Pacific Picea Pinus pitch trees plantations plants ranges Red Fir Redwood regions resin Santa scale-like season seeds Sequoia Shasta Sierra Nevada Siskiyou Mountains slopes soil southern southward species specimens stomata Sugar Gum thick thousand feet Thuya timber tribe Tsuga Valley varieties Wattle Weeping Spruce western White Fir wings wood
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 153 - I do assure you, from my heart, it is a terrible pleasure to me thus to meet a really good man, and one with whom I can talk of plants.3 River Columbia, Oct.
Seite 153 - ... the existence of two genera of the same name in the Vegetable Kingdom, two divisions of 'a genus, or two species of the same name in the same genus, or two divisions of the same name in the same species. Section 6. On Nttmes that are to be rejected, changed, or altered. Art. 59. Nobody is authorized to change a name because it is badly chosen or disagreeable, or another is preferable or better known, or for any other motive, either contestable or of little import.
Seite 132 - ... publishing or mentioning in their works unpublished names which they themselves do not accept, especially if the authors of such names have not expressly authorized them to do so. (See Art, 36, 5.) SECTION 4. On the Precision to be given to Names by the Quotation of the Author who first published them. ART. 48. For the indication of the name or names of any group to be accurate and complete, it is necessary to quote the author who first published the name or combination of names in question.^...
Seite 156 - The foliage is open, light, and of a fresh, agreeable tint; each leaf is four or five inches long, and consists of two parallel rows of leaflets, upon a common stem. The leaflets are small, fine, and somewhat arching, with the convex side outwards. In the autumn, they change from a light green to a dull red, and are shed soon after.
Seite 156 - The largest stocks are 120 feet in height, and from 25 to 40 feet in circumference above the conical base, which at the surface of the earth, is always three or four times as large as the continued diameter of the trunk : in felling them the Negroes are obliged to raise themselves upon scaffolds five or six feet from the ground. The...