11. Mussangara.—Twelve feet long, not very straight, ten inches square.

12. Taxa.—Twenty feet in length, twenty inches square.

13. Mocundo-cundo.—Thirty-six feet in length, three to four feet square; well adapted for vessels’ masts; the bark of this tree supplies quinine, and from the wood also quinine may be extracted.

14. Mucorongo.—Eighteen feet long, twelve inches square.

15. Raiz de Pingué on Páo-preto.—This is the root of the Páo-preto or Pingué (beautiful wood) (No. 2), which is adapted for cabinet-work.

16. Monangare.—Fifteen feet long, fifteen inches square, not very straight, but adapted for block-making and wheelwrights.

17. Mocossocossa.—Eighteen feet long, twenty inches square; adapted for joiner’s work, and takes a high polish.

18. Páo-ferro.—Iron-wood, twenty-four feet long, eight inches square; well adapted for furniture, takes a high polish, and is suitable for tree-nails in ship-building, and wherever it can be substituted for iron.

19. Páo-ferro Mais escuro.—Iron-wood, of a darker quality; dimensions as No. 18.

20. Panguira.—Thirty feet in length, straight, twenty inches square; well adapted for ship-building and beams of houses.