CHAP. CV. CORYLA‘CEE. QUE’RCUS 1857 
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imen tree in the Exeter Nursery is 45 ft. high; and the trunk, at 
the base, measures 7 ft. 6 in. in circumference. 
2 Q. C. 12 LZ, incisa, Q. L. incisa Hort., (fig. 1717.6) has the leaves 
longer, and somewhat more deeply cut, than those of the preceding 
varieties. The tree in the Exeter Nursery is 45 ft. high; and the 
circumference of the trunk, at the base, is 7 ft. 
2 Q.C.13 L.dentata, Q. L.dentata Hort., ( fig. 1716.) is a fine large-leaved 
evergreen variety, lately raised in the Exeter Nursery, and of which 
there will be plants for sale in the autumn of 1837. 
2 Q. C. 14 heterophilia, Q. L. heterophylla Hort., (fig. 1719.) has very 
variable foliage, and is also a recent production of the Exeter Nur- 
sery. Of these two new seedlings, Messrs. Lucombe and Pince inform 
us that they have a great opinion. 
Other Varieties. Q. C. bullata, the blistered, or rough-leaved, Turkey 
oak, is mentioned by Miller; and he probably meant it to apply to Q. C. cana, 
which has rougher leaves than any other variety that we are acquainted 
with. In the Fulham Nursery there is a variety of the Fulham oak pro- 
pagated, Q. C. dentdta péndula, which is said to have pendulous shoots ; 
but we have never seen a plant large enough to enable us to determine 
whether it is sufficiently distinct to be recorded as such. To the varieties 
mentioned above some dozens might be added, by selecting specimens with 
widely different-shaped leaves, and continuing them by grafting. In short, 
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