the soft white substance which in trees is found between the liber or inner bark and the wood, and in progress of time acquiring solidity, becomes itself the wood. From its colour and comparative softness, it has been styled by some writers the fat of trees, adeps arborum.
The albumen is found in largest quantities in trees that are vigorous; though in such as languish, or are sickly, there is a great number of buds. In an oak five inches in diameter, this substance is nearly equal in bulk to the wood. In a trunk of one foot diameter, it is as one to three and a half; of two and a half feet diameter, as one to four and a half, &c. but these proportions vary according to the health and constitution of the trees.—The albumen is frequently gnawed in pieces by insects, which lodge in the substance, and are nourished from it.