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918
NUT
  


Name. Source. Locality. Remarks.

Almond
Almond (bitter)
Ar nut or earth nut

Bambarra ground nut
Ben nut
Bitter nut
Brazil nut
Bread nut
Butter or Souari nut
Cahoun nut
Candle nut
Cashew nut
Chestnut
Cob, Elbert, or hazel
Cob nut of Jamaica
Coco-nut
Cola nut
Dika nut
Ginkgo nut
Ground nut or pea nut
Hickory nut
Hog nut
]esuit's nut
Blocker nut
Moreton Bay chestnut
Nutmeg ..
Nutmeg (wild).
Olive nut
Palm nut
Pecan nut
Pekea nut
Physic nut
Pine nut
Pistachio nut
Quandang nut
Ravensara nut
Rush nut
Sapucaya nut
Tahiti chestnut
Walnut
Water chestnut

Amygdalus communis, var. dulcis
Amygdalus communis, var. amara
Tubers of Bunium flexuosum and
 other species
Voandzeia subterranea
Moringa pterygosperma (a winged seed)
Carya amara (swamp hickory)
Bertholletia excelsa
Brosimum Alicaslrum
Caryocar nuciferum
Attalea Cohune
Aleurites triloba
Anacardium occidental
Castanea vesca
Corylus Avellana
Omphalea diandra
Cocos nucifera
Cola acuminata
Irvingia Barteri
Ginkgo biloba (seed)
Arachis hypogaea
Carya alba
Carya porcina
Trapa natano
Carya tomentosa
Castanospermum australe
Myristica moschata
Myristica fatua, M. tamenlosa, &c.
Eleocarpus Ganitrus, &c.
Elaeis guineensis
Carya oliweformis
Caryocar butyrosum
Curcas purgzms
Pinus Pinea, &c.
Pistachia vera
Fusanus acuminatus
Agathophyllum arvmaticum
Cyperus esculentus (tubers)
Lecythis Ollaria
Inocarpus edulis
Juglans regia
Various species of Trapa

S. Europe
  . . . .
W. Europe (Britain)

Tropics, especially Africa
India .
N. America
S. America
W. Indies
Guiana
Honduras .
S. Sea Islands
W. Indies and Tropical America
S. Europe .
Europe (Britain), &c
W. Indies and Tropical America
Tropics.
W. Africa
W. Africa
japan, China
Tropics
N. America
N. America
S. Europe
N. America
Australia
E. Indies
Tropics
E. Indies
W. Africa
N. America
Guiana
Tropical America
Italy
S. Europe, &c .
Australia
Madagascar
S. Europe, &c
Brazil
S. Sea Islands
Asia, Europe
S. Europe, India, &c.

Food, oil.
Oil.
Food.

Food.
Oil.
See Hickory.
Food, oil.
Food.
Food.
Oil.
Oil.
Food, oil.
Food.
See Hazel.
Food.
Food, oil.
Food.
Food, oil.
Food, oil.
See Ground Nut.
See Hickory.
Eaten by animals.
Food.
See Hickory.
Food.
Spice. See Nutmeg.
Spice. See Nutmeg.
Food.
Oil. See Palm.
Food, oil. See Hickory.
Food.
Oil.
Food.
Food.
Food.
Spice.
Food.
Food.
Food.
Food, oil.
Food.

There remain to be enumerated a number of nuts of commercial value for turnery and ornamental purposes, for medicinal use, and for several miscellaneous applications in the arts. These include:

Name. Source. Locality. Remarks.
Betel nut Areca Catechu E. Indies ...
Bladder nut Staphylea pinnata S. Europe Necklaces.
Boomah nut Pycnacoma matrophylla Africa Tanning.
Bouduc nut Guilandina Bonduc India Medicine, beads.
Clearing nut Strychnos potatorum India Clearing water.
Coquilla nut Attalea funifera Brazil Turnery.
Corozo nut or vegetable ivory Phytelephas macrocarpa Tropical S. America See Palm.
Cumara nut (Tonka bean) Dipterix odorata Tropical S. America Perfume.
Grugru nut . . Acrocomia selerocarpa S. America Beads.
Horse chestnut Aesculus Hippocastanum S. Europe Starch.
Marking nut Semecarpus Anacardium E. Indies Marking ink and varnish.
Nut galls Quercus infectoria Levant Dyeing and ink making; See Galls.
Poison nut Strychnos Nux- Vomica E. Indies Medicine. See Nux Vomica
Sassafras nut Nectandra Puchury S. America Aromatic.
Snake nut Ophiocaryon paradpxum S. America Curiosity.
Soap nut Sapindus Saponaria W. Indies Washing; ornamental

The application of the term nut to many of these products is purely arbitrary, and it is obvious that numerous other bodies not known commercially as nuts might with equal propriety be included in the list. Most of the nuts of real commercial importance are or will be separately noticed, and here further allusion is only made to a few which form current articles of commerce, not otherwise treated of. The bread nut of Jamaica is the fruit of a lofty tree, Brosimum Alicastrum It is about an inch in diameter, and encloses a single seed, which, roasted or boiled, is a pleasant and nutritious article of food.

The souari or surahwa nut, called also the “Butter nut of Demerara,” and by fruiterers the “Suwarrow nut, ” is the fruit of Caryocar nuciferum, a native of the forests of Guiana, growing 80 ft. in height. This is perhaps the finest of all the fruits called nuts. The kernel is large, soft, and even sweeter than the almond, which it somewhat resembles in taste. The few that are imported come from Demerara, and are about the size of an egg, somewhat kidney-shaped, of a rich reddish-brown colour, and covered with large rounded tubercles.

The pekea nut, similar in appearance and properties, is the produce of Caryocar butyrosum, growing in the same regions of tropical America.

The Jamaica cob nut is the produce of a euphorbiaceous tree, Omphalea diandra, the seeds of which resemble in taste the ordinary cob or hazel nut. The seed however contains a deleterious embryo, which must not be eaten.

Cola, kola or goora nuts are the seeds of Cola acuminata (Sterculiaceae) a tree native of tropical Africa, now introduced into the West Indies and South America. The nuts form an important article of commerce throughout Central Africa, being used over a wide area as a kind of stimulant condiment. The nuts, of which there are numerous varieties are found to contain a notable proportion of theine, as much as 2·13 %, besides theobromine and other important food-constituents, to which circumstances, doubtless, their valuable properties are due.

Coquilla nuts, the hard inner portion (“stone”) of the palm, Attalea funifera, the piassaba of Brazil, are highly valued for turnery purposes. They have an elongated oval form, 3 to 4 in. in length, and being intensely hard they take a ine polish, displaying a richly streaked. brown colour.