rather thin, floccosofelted but rather compact and coriaceous, not corky, drying rather woody, faintly and closely zoned, pale to rather deep pinkish buff, rarely cartridge buff, with a fuliginous fuscous, slightly horny, ill-defined, superficial crust 0.3-1 mm thick but up to 2.5 mm thick in old massive specimens[6]
walls pale pinkish, very thick and glassy, aseptate, unbranched, unlimited or some 500-1000 μ long with endings in the flesh either simple or emitting 2-3 binding hyphae[6]
developing numerous distinct or ill-defined layers, 1-3 mm thick and totalling up to 7 cm thick in old ungulate specimens, with or without intervening layers of flesh 0.3-1 mm thick, old tubes stuffed[6]
a dense palisade of cylindric to subclavate skeletal ends 4-9 μm wide, the walls becoming fuscous brown to fuliginous and encrusted with brownish matter soluble in potash, not agglutinated, the crust extending inwards into the flesh and becoming invaded by a few binding hyphae, becoming leached by rain, and rimose on drying through lack of agglutination[6]
context ochraceous, pale pink, pinkish tan, or wood color, fibrous, up to 1.5 cm thick, sometimes darker than the pores, with a silky sheen and with a dark reaction when touched with KOH[4]
Notice: The data in the table above is semi-automatically extracted from the description. Please be sure to check the original documents for accurate information.