Butter of the Great Macaw Tree, from Aercomit fusiformis.
Japan Wax is from Rhus succedaneum. Almond Butter, from Amygdalus communis. Cocum Butter, from Garcinia purpurea seeds which produce solid oil.
Gamboge Butter, Mukke Tylum, TAM., Ara. sana Ghoorghy yennai, CAN., is a product of tin Garcinia pictoria, Roxb., which grows abundantl3 in Mysore and the western jungles. Gamboge butters are solid, and of a deep leek-green colour The oil is procured by pdunding the seed in t stone mortar, and boiling the mass until the butter or oil rise to the surface. 24 measures of seed yield one seer of butter ; it is sold at the rate of 14 arenas per seer of Rs. 24, in the Nuggur division of Mysore, and is used as a lamp oil and as ghi.
Stereulia fcetida Oil, Coodiray yennai, or Coodira pusjan yennai, TAM., is thick at all seasons of the year, and is obtainable probably in large quantities in the Nalla Malla and Yella Malla forests of the Peninsula of India.
Butter of Laurel, Laurus nobilis.
Solid Oils are obtained from some Dipterocarpi in the Indian Archipelago.
Solid Oil of the Horse-eyes and Cacoons of Jamaica, Fevillea scandens, is white and hard. Mijo or Japan Butter, from Dolichos soja. Solid Oil, from Myristica (Virola) sebifera of British Guiana.
Solid Oil from the Demerara butter tree, Saouari, Pekea tuberculosa.
Solid Oil of Bombay, from Salvadora Persica, or Vernonia anthelmintica? Broonga Malagum Oil, of Masulipatam, sepa rates into three portions,—the uppermost, fluid, resembling brown sherry ; the middle, of the con sistence of ghi, and brownish yellow ; and the lowest almost solid, and of a hair-brown colour.
Mooroogana Butter, of Canara, is used for medicinal purposes, and as an ointment for the wounds of cattle injured by tigers. It is said to be produced from a forest tree growing in the Canara jungles. It is dark brown, and is the most solid of the solid oils.
Odul or Adul Oil, of Travancore, separates into two portions,—the upper, fluid, of the colour of golden sherry ; the lower, reddish white, of the consistence of ordinary hard salt butter.
Shacotty Oil, of Canara, used for cutaneous eruptions, separates into two portions,—the upper, yellowish and fluid, and the lower brownish-red, and of the consistence of hard ghi.
Hibavania, a solid oil of Canara, from the Sampajoy district, of a clove-brown colour.
Camujuy Tree Oil ; a small bottle, priced Rs. 24, from the same district, was a dark gelatinous mass, of the consistence of blancmange.
Oil of Hydnocarpus inebrians, the thortay oil of Canara, used for sores, is a very valuable vege table solid oil, of the consistence of ordinary hard salt butter.
Terminalia bellerica, Tani-kai yennay, separates into two portions,—the one fluid, of a pale oil green colour, and the other white, floccular, and of the consistence of ghi.—illadras Illuseum Report, Simmonds, pp. 510-514.