. Gray's school and field book of botany. Consisting of "Lessons in botany," and "Field, forest, and garden botany," bound in one volume. Botany; Botany. 9 10 which all likeness to leaves is lost, consisting of slender stalks with a knoD at summit, the Stamens; and lastly, in the centre, the rounded body, which becomes a pod, surmounted by five slender or stalk-like bodies. This, all together, is the Pistil. The lower part of it, which is to contain the seeds, is the Ovakt ; the slender organs surmounting this are Styles ; the knob borne on the apex of each style is a Stigm


. Gray's school and field book of botany. Consisting of "Lessons in botany," and "Field, forest, and garden botany," bound in one volume. Botany; Botany. 9 10 which all likeness to leaves is lost, consisting of slender stalks with a knoD at summit, the Stamens; and lastly, in the centre, the rounded body, which becomes a pod, surmounted by five slender or stalk-like bodies. This, all together, is the Pistil. The lower part of it, which is to contain the seeds, is the Ovakt ; the slender organs surmounting this are Styles ; the knob borne on the apex of each style is a Stigma. Going back to the sta- mens, these are of two parts, viz, the stalk, called Pilament, and the body it bears, the Anther. Anthers are filled with Pollen, a powdery sub- stance made up of minute grains. 17- The pollen shed from the anthers when they open falls upon or is conveyed to the stigmas; then the pollen-grains set up a kind of growth (to be discerned only by aid of a good microscope), which penetrates the style: this growth takes the form of a thread more delicate than the finest spider's web, and reaches the bodies which are to become seeds (Ovules they are called until this change occurs) ; tliese, touched by this influence, are in- cited to a new growth within, which becomes an embryo. So, as the ovary ripens into the seed-pod or capsule (Fig. 1, etc.) containing seeds, each seed enclosing a rudimentary new plantlet, the round of this vegetable existence is completed. Fig. 9. Flax-flowers about natural size. 10. Section of a flower moderately enlarged, showing a part of the petals and stamens, all five styles, and a section of ovary with two ovules or rudimentary Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Gray, Asa, 1810-1888; Gray, Asa, 1810-1888. Elements of botany for beginners an


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1887