Your search within this document for 'coast' resulted in twelve matching pages.
1

“...PLANTS of the COAST OF COROMANDEL; selected from DRAWINGS AND DESCRIPTIONS presented to THE HON. COURT OF DIRECTORS OF THE EAST INDIA COMPANY. BY WILLIAM ROXBURGH, M.D. published, by their order, under the direction OF SIR JOSEPH BANKS, BART. p. r. s. VOL. I. london: printed by w. bulmer and co. for george nicol, bookseller to his majesty, PALL-MALL. 1795....”
2

“...PREFACE. * The present Fasciculus of Plants growing on the Coast of Coromandel, being the first of a.progressive work, with which the Honourable Court of Directors of the East India Company has determined to favour the public, it is hoped, will prove as acceptable to the lovers of Botany in general, as useful at the Company's establishments abroad. It is intended that the selection should be made from five hundred drawings and descriptions, pre- sented to the Honourable Court of Directors by Dr. William Roxburgh, one of the Company's medical servants, and their Botanist in the Carnatic; and, with a more immediate view to utility, while preference will be given to subjects connected either with medicine, the arts, cy: manufactures, the liberality o.f the# Jdonourable Court of Directors encourages the admission of new plants, or of such as have hitherto been imperfectly described, although their qualities and uses may as yet remain unexplored. After all that has been already done, India still...”
3

“...PREFACE The present Fasciculus of Plants growing on the Coast of Coromandel, being the first of a.progressive work, with which the Honourable Court of Directors of the East India Company has determined to favour the public, it is hoped, will prove as acceptable to the lovers of Botany in general, as useful at the Company's establishments abroad. It is intended that the selection should be made from five hundred drawings and descriptions, pre- sented to the Honourable Court of Directors by Dr. William Roxburgh, one of the Company's medical servants, and their Botanist in the Carnatic; and, with a more immediate view to utility, while preference will be given to subjects connected either with medicine, the arts, qr manufactures, the liberality o/the# JHonourable Court of Directors encourages the admission of new plants, or of such as have hitherto been imperfectly described, although their qualities and uses may as yet remain unexplored. After all that has been already done, India still presents...”
4

“...the nectarial glands into a perforated receptacle. Anthers quadrangular, opening on each side with an oval lid. Germ below, egged. Style none. Stigma small, immersed in the perforation of the receptacle of the filaments and nectarial glands. Capsule globular, wrinkled, one-celled, one-valved, does not open, size* of a cherry, ends in two long, obtuse, lanced, membrana- ceous wings. Seed one. OBSERVATIONS. This grows to be a very large tree, is chiefly a native of the moun- tainous parts of the coast, casts its leaves about the end of the wet season ; flowers during the cold season when the tree is naked; the leaves come out soon after. The wood of this tree is white and very light, is employed to make cattamarans (rafts), when to be had, in preference to any other. 2. SIRIUM MYRTIFQLIUM. Linn. Mant. 200. Sandal Wood Tree. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, spreading,lanced, entire, waved, smooth, shining, about two inches long, and three-quarters of an inch broad. Stipules none. Raceme t...”
5

“...leaves are generally fascicles of smaller leaves. Stipules connecting, ciliated. Flowers terminal, small, white, very numerous, the whole forming a large umbell, composed of small three-cleft umbellets. Bracts minute, awled. The parts of fructification agree exactly with those of the genus. This is a small biennial, rarely triennial plant, it grows in very light dry sandy ground near the sea. Flowers during the latter part of the wet season ; seed ripe in January . Itris much cultivated on the coast of Coromandel, and grows best in the purest and lightest sand, there its roots descend to a great depth. Cattle are penned upon the ground for some time before it is sown, to manure it, or some other manure employed, generally the lightest; it is then'cleared of weeds, and its surface made level, if not so before. The seeds are mixed with much sand, and sown as soon as the rains begin in June or July (that is in the Circars); the sand is mixed with the seed to enable 'the sower to sow it suffi-...”
6

“...a smooth somewhat hard shell, of a rich beautiful orange colour when ripe, filled with a soft jelly-like pulp. Seeds from two to five, immersed in the pulp of the berry. A middling sized tree, is common in almost every part of the coast. Flowers during the cold season. The wood of this tree is hard and durable, and is used for many purposes by the natives. Itns exceeding bitter, particularly that of the root, which is used to cure intermitting fevers, and the bites of venomous snakes, when that of Naga-musadie cannot be had. The seeds are employed in the distillation of country spirits, to render them more intoxicating. The pulp of the fruit seems perfectly innocent, as it is eat greedily by many sorts of birds. There is a tree, but exceeding rare on this coast, which the Te- lingas call Naga Musadie (Naga, or Tansoo Paum in the Telinga language means the Cobra de Capella or Coluber Naja of Linnaeus, tansoo means dancing, and paum snake, this sort being famous for erecting its head, and...”
7

“...11 TECTONA GRANDIS. mountains bordering on the banks of the Godavery above Rajah- mundry, Pegu, kc. &c. Lord Cornwallis and Colonel Kyd have begun some time ago to introduce it into Bengal, where it thrives well. On this coast it flowers in the hot season. Seed ripe in o August and September. The wood of this tree, the only useful part of it, from long expe- rience has been found to be by far the most useful timber in Asia; it is light, easily worked, and at the same time both strong and durable: that which grows near the banks of the Godavery is beautifully veined, considerably closer in the grain and heavier than any other I have seen; it is therefore particularly fit for furniture, gun carriages, &c. where small timber is wanted. For ship building the teke is reckoned superior to any other sort of wood, being light, strong, and very durable, either in or out of the water. Pegu pro- duces the largest quantity, the large rivers there enable the natives to bring it down to the sea ports...”
8

“... smooth, from four to six inches long, and about three-eighths of an inch broad. Raceme lateral, long, few-flowered. Fl&wers large, beautiful whif?, with a small tinge of the rose, and striated with purple veins, inodorous. Xectary and Stamens as in Asclepias and Pergularia. Follicles oblong, inflated. It is a twining perennial, grows in hedges and among bushes on the banks of water courses, pools, &c. casts its leaves during the dry season; is in flower and foliage during the rainy. On this coast I do not find that the natives ever eat it, nor apply it to any purpose whatever. Cattle eat it. Its elegant flowers render it well deserving of a place in the flower garden. 12. SEMECARPUS ANACARDIUM. Linn. Suppl. 182. Nella-jiedy of the Telingas. Marking-nut of the English. Anacardium orientale of the Materia Medica. Trunk very large, straight, high, covered with grey scabrous bark, the bark of the younger parts smooth, light ash-colour; its inner substance contains in crevices a quantity of...”
9

“...large tree. Flowers during the wet season. Seed ripe in January and February. This tree is by no means common on this coast, and it is only among the aboxementioned mountains that I have found it wild. It is also a native of the south-west frontier of the Bengal province, and probably of many other parts. The markets over India are supplied with wood from Siam, and the Malay countries to the east- ward. I have some thousands of young trees about the Company's pepper plantations, which thrive well, and in the course of a few years will be fully as large as what is generally met with at market, although, like others of this nature, the colour of the wood improves by age, and ought therefore to be left till the colour has attained to its utmost degree of perfection. The uses of this wood in dying are numerous throughout Asia; it is an ingredient in the red dye of this coast, commonly called the Chay dye, as may be seen above under the description of Oldenlandia umbellata. Where a cheap red...”
10

“...long as the large stamen. Stigma simple, incurved. Capsules, from one to three, globular, size of a large pea, one-celled, one-valved, not opening, each is enlarged with three unequal spreading, membranaceous, wedge-shaped, obtuse wings, be- sides a small erect one in the centre. Seed single, globular, affixed to the bottom of the capsule. It is a large climbing woody shrub, a native of the Circar moun- tains. Flowering time the wet and cold season. It is cultivated in our gardens all over the coast, on account of the beauty and fra- grance of its flowers. 19. BASSIA LATIFOLIA. Mahwah Tree. Transact, of the Society of Bengal, vol. 1. p. 300. Ipie of the Telingas. Illipay of the Tamuls. Oil Tree of the English. * Trunk straight, but short, covered with smooth ash-coloured Bark. Branches very numerous; the lower spreading horizontally. Leaves alternate, petiohM, crowded about the extremities of the branches, oblong, rigid, smooth above, below somewhat whit- ish, from four to eight inches long...”
11

“...pediceled, lanced, downy. Style ascending, a little larger than the filaments. ^ Stigma small, glandulous. ^ Legume pediceled, large, pendulous, all but the apex, where the seed is lodged leafy, downy, about six inches long, by two broad, never opens of itself. Seed one, lodged at the point of the legume, oval, much compressed, smooth, brown, from one and a quarter to one and a half inch long, and about one broad. * This is a middle sized, or rather a large tree, not common on the low lands of this coast, but very common among the mountains; casts its leaves during the cold season; they come out again with the flowers about tjie months af March and April; seed ripe in June and July. From natural fissures, and wounds made in the bark of this tree, during the hot season, there issues a most beautiful red juice, which soon hardens into a ruby-coloured, brittle, astringent gum; but it soon loses its beautiful colour if exposed to the air. To preserve the colour, the gum must be gathered as soon as...”
12

“...leguminous, unitej in form of a star, one-celled, one- valved, opening lengthways, on the outside covered with yellow down, and many stiff burning hairs. Seeds from three to five, oblong, chesnut-coloured, inserted alter- nately into the margins of the capSules. male flowers. Calyx, Stamen, and columnar Receptacle as in the hermaphrodite. Pistil: the rudiments of the germs only, without any appearance of a style. , This is a very large tree, chiefly a native of the mountainous countries on the coast; casts its leaves about the end of the wet sea- son; flowers during the cold; the leaves come out with the fruit about the beginning of the hot season. The wood of this tree is soft and spongy; towards the centre of large trees it is reddish. I do not know of any use it is put to, ex- cept to make Hindoo guitars. I observed that the water in which I kept green branches for exa- mination, became thick, like a clear, glutinous jelly. Bark exceedingly astringent, tinges the saliva reddish. Seeds...”