. Botany for secondary schools; a guide to the knowledge of the vegetation of the neighborhood. Plants. r* 189. Terminal heads of the white- weed (in some places erro- neously called ox-eye daisy). 190. Catkins of black walnut, at/). Pistillate flowers at a. Paragraph 284. vex or flat, it is a corymb. (Fig. 192.) The outer- most flowers open first. Fig. 193 shows many corymbs of the bridal wreath, one of the spireas. 255. When the branches of an indeterminate cluster arise from a common point, like the frame of an umbrella, the cluster is an umbel. (Fig. 194.) Typical umbels occur in carrot, p


. Botany for secondary schools; a guide to the knowledge of the vegetation of the neighborhood. Plants. r* 189. Terminal heads of the white- weed (in some places erro- neously called ox-eye daisy). 190. Catkins of black walnut, at/). Pistillate flowers at a. Paragraph 284. vex or flat, it is a corymb. (Fig. 192.) The outer- most flowers open first. Fig. 193 shows many corymbs of the bridal wreath, one of the spireas. 255. When the branches of an indeterminate cluster arise from a common point, like the frame of an umbrella, the cluster is an umbel. (Fig. 194.) Typical umbels occur in carrot, parsnip, parsley and other plants of the parsley family: the family is known as the Umbelliferae or umbel-bearing family. In 11 *. 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 Bailey, L. H. (Liberty Hyde), 1858-1954. New York, Macmillan


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectplants, bookyear1913