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ROBINIA , or See also: LOCUST-See also: TREE, a genus of about six See also: species native of the See also: United States and Mexico, belonging to the sub-See also: order Papilionaceae of the See also: great See also: family See also: Leguminosae
.
It was named by See also: Linnaeus in honour of See also: Jean See also: Robin (1550-1629), herbalist to the See also: king of
See also: France and his son and successor, Vespasien Robin (1579–1660) by whom the best-known species, Robinia Pseudacacia, was introduced into See also: Europe, in the J'ardin du Roi at See also: Paris in 1636
.
This tree, the See also: bastard See also: acacia, or false acacia, and often called erroneously acacia, is now widely cultivated as an ornamental tree in this country and on the See also: European continent
.
It grows from 30 to 6o ft. high, and bears long, graceful, compound leaves with 9 to 17 bright See also: green oblong leaflets, and See also: white fragrant
See also: flowers in loose pendulous racemes, recalling the See also: laburnum in habit
.
There are many varieties in See also: English gardens varying in the method of growth, the presence or See also: absence of thorns (persistent spinose stipules) on the branches and the colour of the flower
.
• In the eastern United States, where it is native, it grows from 70 to 8o ft. high with a trunk 3 or 4 ft. in diameter
.
It is one of the most valuable See also: timber trees of the See also: American See also: forest
.
The See also: wood is heavy, very hard, strong, close-grained and durable, and is extensively used in See also: shipbuilding, also for posts and other purposes where durability in contact with the ground is essential
.
Like many See also: plants of the same family, the leaves show sleep See also: movement, folding together at See also: night and in dull or wet weather; for this reason it is less injurious than many trees to plants growing in its shade, as the rain is able more quickly to reach the ground beneath
.
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