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HONEY See also: tree, Gleditsia triacanthos, a member of the natural See also: order See also: Leguminosae, and a native of the more eastern See also: United States of See also: North See also: America
.
It reaches from 75 to 140 ft. in height with a trunk 2 or 3, or sometimes 5 or 6 ft. in diameter, and slender spreading branches which See also: form a broad, flattish See also: crown
.
The branchlets bear numerous See also: simple or three-forked (whence the See also: species-name triacanthos) See also: sharp stiff spines, 3 to 4 in. long, at first red in colour, then See also: chestnut See also: brown; they are
See also: borne above the leaf-axils and represent undeveloped branchlets; sometimes they are borne also on the trunk and See also: main branches
.
The long-stalked leaves are 7 to 8 in. long with eight to fourteen pairs of narrowly oblong leaflets
.
The See also: flowers, which are of two kinds, are borne in racemes in the leaf-axils; the staminate flowers in larger numbers
.
The brown pods are often 12 to 18 in. long, have thin, tough walls, and contain a quantity of pulp between the seeds; they contract spirally when drying
.
The tree was first cultivated in See also: Europe towards the end of the 17th century by See also: Bishop See also: Compton in his garden at See also: Fulham, near See also: London, and is now extensively planted as an ornamental tree
.
The name of the genus commemorates Johann Gottlieb Gleditsch (1714-1786), a friend of See also: Linnaeus, and the author of one of the earliest See also: works on scientific forestry
.
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[back] HONEY (Chin. me ; Sansk. madhu, mead, honey; cf. A.... |
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