green, or gray, with which the gypsum is cut up, are darkened with dendrites of various dimensions and sometimes very elegant. These dendrites are likewise found in limestones, chalk, building-stones, lithographic stones, and compact marbles;
in sandstones, granite, and various other crystalline rocks. They are not always
This name, like that of dendrites, shows that a vegetable origin was at first attributed to these accidents. Sometimes fancy went further; and Fig. 4 represents, from Mylius, whom we have already quoted, the figure of a dendrite in which the author saw a landscape—a plain traversed by a river and bordered by a chain of wooded hills, and pierced with caves. It is easy to discover that dendrites have none of the characteristics of the vegetable ramifications with which we are at first inclined to compare them, and, when we study them under a sufficient magnifying