Online Encyclopedia

ARBOR VITAE (Tree of Life)

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Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 338 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARBOR VITAE (

Tree of
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Life)
  , a name given by Clusius to
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species of Thuja . The name Thuja, which was adopted by
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Linnaeus from the Thuya of Tournefort, seems to be derived from the Greek word Obos, signifying sacrifice, probably because the resin procured from the plant was used as
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incense . The
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plants belong to the natural order Coniferae, tribe Cupressineae (Cypresses) . Thuja occidentalis is the Western or
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American arbor vitae, the Cupressus Arbor Vitae of old authors . It is a native of North
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America, and ranges from
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Canada to the mountains of Virginia and Carolina . It is a moderate-sized tree, and was introduced into Britain before 1597, when it was mentioned in Gerard's Herbal . In its native country it attains a height of about 5o ft . The leaves are small and imbricate, and are borne on flattened branches, which are
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apt to be mistaken for the leaves . When bruised the leaves give out an aromatic odour . The flowers appear early in spring, and the fruit is ripened about the end of September . In Britain the plant is a hardy
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evergreen, and can only be looked upon as a large
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shrub or low tree . It is often cut so as to form hedges in gardens .

The

wood is very durable and useful for outdoor
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work, such as
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fencing, posts, etc . Another species of arbor vitae is Thuja orientalis, known also as Biota orientalis . The latter generic name is derived from the Greek adjective RLWT6s, formed from /Los,
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life, probably in connexion with the name " tree of life." This is the Eastern or Chinese arbor vitae . It is a native of
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China . It was cultivated in the
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Chelsea Physick Garden in 1752, and was believed to have been sent to
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Europe by French missionaries . It has roundish cones, with numerous scales and wingless seeds . The leaves, which have a pungent aromatic odour, are said to yield a yellow dye . There are numerous varieties of this plant in cultivation, one of the most remarkable of which is the variety pendula, with long, flexible,
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hanging, cord-like branches; it was discovered in
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Japan about 1776 by Carl Peter Thunberg, a pupil of Linnaeus, who made valuable collections at the Cape of Good Hope, in the Dutch East Indies and in Japan . The variety pygmaea forms a small
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bush a few inches high . Thuja gigantea, the red or canoe cedar, a native of north-western America from
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southern
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Alaska to north California, is the finest species, the trunk rising from a massive
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base to the height of 150 to 200 f t . It was not introduced to Britain till 1853 . It is one of the handsomest of conifers, forming an elongated cone of foliage, which in some gardens has already reached 70 or 8o ft. in height .

It thrives in most kinds of soils . The

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timber is easily worked and used for construction, especially where exposed to the weather .

End of Article: ARBOR VITAE (Tree of Life)
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