. 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. This is the inflorescence of Caraway (Fig. 208), Parsnip, and almost all of the great family of Umbelliferous (umbel-bearing) plants. 215. The second- ary or partial umbels of a compound um- bel are Umbellets. When the umbellets are subtended by an involucre, this sec- ondary involucre is 208 called anluvoLTJCEL. 216. A Compound raceme is a cluster of racemes racemosely arranged, as in Smilacina racemosa. A compound corymb


. 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. This is the inflorescence of Caraway (Fig. 208), Parsnip, and almost all of the great family of Umbelliferous (umbel-bearing) plants. 215. The second- ary or partial umbels of a compound um- bel are Umbellets. When the umbellets are subtended by an involucre, this sec- ondary involucre is 208 called anluvoLTJCEL. 216. A Compound raceme is a cluster of racemes racemosely arranged, as in Smilacina racemosa. A compound corymb is a corymb some branches of which branch again in the same vray, as in Mountain Ash. A compound spike is a spicately disposed cluster of spikes. 217. A Panicle, such as that of Oats and many Grasses, is a compound flower-cluster of a more or less • open sort which branches with apparent irregularity, neither into corymbs nor racemes. Pig. 209 repre- sents the simplest panicle. It is, as it were, a raceme of which some of the pedicels have branched so as to bear a few flowers on pedicels of their own, while others remain simple. A compound panicle is ore that branches in this vay again and again. 218. Determinate Infloresoence is that in which the flowers are from terminal buds. The simplest case is that of a solitary terminal flower, as. 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 and for schools; Gray, Asa, 1810-1888. Field, forest, and garden botany. New York : American Book Co.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1887