422 CUPULLFEIi.E. (oak family.) 



— Dry gravelly or sandy soil, Florida to Mississippi, and northward. — A small 

 tree. Leaves 4'— 9' long. Intermediate tonus between this and No. 7 are not 

 uncommon, 



* * * Leaves long-petioled, sinuate-pinnatifid, bristle-awned, deciduous. 

 -t- Leaves smooth or marly so. 



"■ Q. Catesbsei, Miehx. (Tihkkv-Oak.) Leaves somewhat coriaceous, 

 broad, narrowed into a short petiole, deeply pinnatitid ; the lobes very acute 

 from a broad base, spreading, mostly falcate and entire ; fruit rather large, short- 

 peduncled ; cup thick, turbinate, with broad obtuse scales, enclosing half of the 

 ovoid nut; the upper scales indexed and lining the inner edge of the cup. — 

 Dry pine barrens, Florida to North Carolina. — A small tree. Leaves 6'- 9' 

 long. 



8. Q. tinetoria, Bartr. (Black Oak.) Leaves obovate-oblong, with 

 deep or shallow open sinuses, and about C sharply-toothed lobes, obtuse or trun- 

 cate at the base, pubescent when young, at length only in the axils of the veins 

 beneath ; cup top-shaped, with broad scales, enclosing about half of the round- 

 ish depressed nut. (Q. discolor, Ait.) — Dry woods, chiefly in the upper dis- 

 trict-, and northward. — A large tree, with the outer bark dark-brown, the inner 

 thick and yellow. Leaves turning light-brown after frost. Nuts 6" -8" long. 



9. Q. coccinea, Wang. (Scarlet Oak.) Leaves long-petioled, oval or 



oblong, witli deep and broad sinuses, and 6-8 entire or sparingly toothed lobes, 

 truncate at the base, smooth and shining on both sides; cup top-shaped, with 

 coarse scales, enclosing one half or one third of the ovoid nut. — Dry woods, 

 Florida, and northward; more abundant in the upper districts. — A large nee, 

 not easily distinguished from the preceding, and probably only a form of it. 

 Leaves turning bright scarlet after frost. 



10. Q. rubra, L. (Red Oak.) Leaves ohlong, with open shallow sinuses, 



and 8-12 entire or sharply toothed lobes, smooth on both sides, paler beneath ; 

 fruit large, cup shallow, flat, with fine scales, enclosing the base of the ovate 01 

 ohlong nut. — Rocky woods, Florida, and northward. — A large tree. Leaves 

 turning dark red after frost Nut 1' long. 



11. Q. Georgiana, M. A. Curtis. Shrubby; leaves small, very smooth, 

 6omcwhat obovate, wedge-shaped at the base, with deep or shallow open sinuses, 

 and 3-5 triangular-lanceolate entire acute or obtuse lobes; fruit short-pedun- 



cled ; cup BmOOth and shining, saucer-shaped, enclosing one third of the oval- 



globose nut. — Stone .Mountain, Georgia, Ravenel. — Shrub 6° - 8° high, grow- 

 ing in clusters. Leaves 8' -4' long. Fruit abundant. Nut J' long. 

 •+- •*- Leaves tomentose beneath. 



12. Q. falcata, Michx. (Spanish Oak.) Leaves oblong, rounded at the 

 I -6 lobed , the lobes entire or sparingly toothed bJ the apex, the terminal 



one commonly narrow and elongated ; fruit rather small ; cup somewhat top- 



shaped, with coarse seah-., enclosing half of the globular nut. — Var. Pi 1 1 - 



i in. i \, Ell., has larger leaves, with 11-18 nearly opposite and spreading li 



— Dry woods, Florida, and northward. — A large tree. Leaves 4'-J' long, 

 entire near the huse. Nut ^' long. 



