. A text-book of botany for secondary schools. Botany. CHAPTER II LEAVES 8. Arrangement.—Leaves appear upon the stems at definite regions called nodes (joints); and this jointed structure of the stem is one of its characteristic features, although it is much more conspicuous in some plants than. Fig. 1.—Leaf arrangement: A, spiral or alternate .eaves; B, opposite (cyclic) leaves; C, whorled (cyclic) leaves.—After Gray. in others. In certain plants only one leaf appears at each node; and if an imaginary line be drawn connecting the points on the nodes at which successive leaves appear, it 5. Pl


. A text-book of botany for secondary schools. Botany. CHAPTER II LEAVES 8. Arrangement.—Leaves appear upon the stems at definite regions called nodes (joints); and this jointed structure of the stem is one of its characteristic features, although it is much more conspicuous in some plants than. Fig. 1.—Leaf arrangement: A, spiral or alternate .eaves; B, opposite (cyclic) leaves; C, whorled (cyclic) leaves.—After Gray. in others. In certain plants only one leaf appears at each node; and if an imaginary line be drawn connecting the points on the nodes at which successive leaves appear, it 5. 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 Coulter, John Merle, 1851-1928. New York, D. Appleton


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1906