. 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. 72 FLOWERS. [SECTION 8. Plicate or Plaited (Fig. 194), as in the Maple and Currant. If rolled, it may be so either from the tip downwards, as in Ferns and the Sundew (Fig. 197), when in unroU- 193 l9i 195 ing it resembles the head >^. ft A ^,—^^ of a crosier, and is said to J^^ I'^ 'ft ^^^ ^^ Circimte; or it may be ^f W/) ^l VGy J "^"l^^d up parallel with the ^^ VwAv ^^—X axis, either from one edge into a coil
. 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. 72 FLOWERS. [SECTION 8. Plicate or Plaited (Fig. 194), as in the Maple and Currant. If rolled, it may be so either from the tip downwards, as in Ferns and the Sundew (Fig. 197), when in unroU- 193 l9i 195 ing it resembles the head >^. ft A ^,—^^ of a crosier, and is said to J^^ I'^ 'ft ^^^ ^^ Circimte; or it may be ^f W/) ^l VGy J "^"l^^d up parallel with the ^^ VwAv ^^—X axis, either from one edge into a coil, when it is Con- volute (Fig. 195), as in the Apricot and Plum; or rolled from both edges towards the midrib, — sometimes inwards, when it is Invo- lute (Fig. 198), as in the Violet and Water - LUy ; sometimes outwards, when it is Revolute (Fig. 196), in the Rosemary and Azalea. The figures are diagrams, representing sections through the leaf, in the way they were represented by Linnaeus. 196. Section VIII. FLOWEES. 196. Flowers are for the production of seed (16). Stems and brancbes, which for a time put forth leaves fOr vegetation, may at length put forth flowers for reproduction. § 1. POSITION AND ARRANGEMENT OP FLOWERS, OR INFLOR- ESCENCE. 197. Flower-buds appear just where leaf-buds appear; that is, they are either terminal or axillary (4!7-49). Morphologically, flowers answer to shoots or branches, and their parts to leaves. 198. In the same species the flowers are usually from axillary buds only, or from terminal buds only; but in some they are both axillary and terminal. 199. Inflorescence, which is the name used by Linnaeus to signify mode of flower-arrangement, is accordinglyof three classes: namely, Indeterminate, when the flowers are in the axils of leaves, that is, are from axillary buds; Determinate, when they are from terminal buds, and so terminate a stem or branch; and Mixed, when these two are combined. 200. Indeterminate Inflorescence (likewise, and f
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1887