| François André Michaux - Science - 1819 - 414 pages
...long, are flat, and, like those oF the Blue Ash, are nearly as broad at the base as at the summit. The Black Ash is easily distinguished from the White...the layers of the epidermis applied in broad sheets. The perfect wood is of a brown complexion and fine texture ; it is tougher and more elastic than that... | |
| Daniel Jay Browne - Arboriculture - 1832 - 410 pages
...longer exposed to inundations. The black ash is 60 or 70 feet high and about two feet in diameter. It is easily distinguished from the white ash by its...the layers of the epidermis applied in broad sheets. The buds are of a deep blue, and the young shoots of a bright green PLATE XXXI. Fig. 1. A leaflet.... | |
| Daniel Jay Browne - Arboriculture - 1832 - 426 pages
...longer exposed to inundations. The black ash is 60 or 70 feet high and about two feet in diameter. It is easily distinguished from the white ash by its...the layers of the epidermis applied in broad sheets. The buds are of a deep blue, and the young shoots of a bright green PLATE XXXI. Fig.l. A leaflet. Fig.... | |
| William Gilpin - Forests and forestry - 1834 - 432 pages
...a bright green, sprinkled with dots of the same colour, which disappear as the season advances. It is easily distinguished from the white ash by its bark, which is of a duller hue ; and it is less deeply furrowed, and has the layers of the epidermis applied in broad sheets. The... | |
| Samuel Griswold Goodrich - Botany - 1838 - 442 pages
...exposed to inundations. The black ash is sixty or seventy feet high and about two feet in diameter. It is easily distinguished from the white ash by its bark, which is of a duller hue, less deeply farrowed, and has the layers of the epidermis applied in broad sheets. The buds are of a deep blue,... | |
| John Claudius Loudon - Botany - 1842 - 1248 pages
...resemble those of the blue ash (F. quadrangulata), and are nearly as broad at the base as at the summit. The black ash is easily distinguished from the white...layers of the epidermis applied in broad sheets It 12. F. (A.) QUADRANGULA'TA Michx. The quadrangular-ironcAci/ Ash. lilftilificatim. Michx. Fl. Bor.... | |
| John Claudius Loudon - 1842 - 1320 pages
...those of the blue ash ( /•'. quadrangulàta), and are nearly as broad at the base as at the summit. The black ash is easily distinguished from the white...the layers of the epidermis applied in broad sheets f 12. F. (A.) QUADRANGULA'TA Michx. The quadrangular-6ranrA«f Ash. Identification Michx. Fl. Bar.... | |
| Andrew Jackson Downing - 1844 - 554 pages
...green, sprinkled with dots of the same colour, which disappear as the season advances. It may readily be distinguished from the White ash by its bark, which is of a duller hue, and less deeply furrowed. The Black ash is altogether a tree of less stature than the preceding. The... | |
| Andrew Jackson Downing - Architecture, Domestic - 1844 - 548 pages
...green, sprinkled with dots of the same colour, which disappear as the season advances. It may readily be distinguished from the White ash by its bark, which is of a duller hue, and less deeply furrowed. The Black ash is altogether a tree of less stature than the preceding. The... | |
| Daniel Jay Browne - Trees - 1846 - 542 pages
...height of seventy or eighty feet, with a trunk from two feet to two feet and a half in diameter. It is easily distinguished from the white ash by its bark, which is more inclined to a yellowish cast, is smoother, with the furrows, i in old trees, parallel and perpendicular,... | |
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