LXX. CORYLA CEJE l QUE'rCUSo 



879 



iiiiU^- 



16C3. Q. (P.) ;. hybrida. 



Hori. Ketv. ed. 2. v. p. 288. 

 (Our fg. 1603.) Rather more 

 obtuse leaves than the species. 



The whole of the American oaks 

 belonging to the section Phellos are re- 

 markable for retaining their leaves, in 

 particular soils and situations, for two, 

 three, and in some cases even four, years, without their changing colour ; 

 differing in this respect, both from evergreens, which change their leaves in 

 the spring of every year ; and from those de- 

 ciduous trees which retain their leaves in a 

 withered state durino; winter. 



1604. Q. (P.) taurifoUa. 



The Shingle 



5r 26. Q. imbrica'ria Wil/d. 

 Oak. 



Identification. Willd. Sp. T\. 4. p. 42S ; Pursh Sept., 2. p. 



627. ; Michx. Quer., No. 10. 

 Synonymes. Q. latifOlia Hort. ; Laurel Oak, Filed-Cup 



Oak, Jack Oak, Black Jack Oak, A?ner. ; Chene a Lattes, 



Fr. 

 Engravings. Mich-t, Quer., 1. 15, 16. ; N. Amer. Syl., 1. t. 



15. ; and ourfig.'\605. 



Spec. Char., S^c. Leaves elliptic-oblong, acute 

 at each end, entire, almost sessile ; downy 

 beneath. Nut nearly globose. (^Smilh.) A 

 deciduous tree. Alleghanies, but rare. 

 Height 40 or 50 feet. Introduced in 17S6. 



The leaves are long, lanceolate, entire, and 

 of a shining green. The trunk is branching, 

 and often crooked ; and the wood, though hard 

 and heavy, has open pores like that of Q. riibra. 



1605. Q. imbriciria. 



* 27. Q. heterophy'lla Michx. The various-leaved, or Bartram's, Oak 



Identification. Michx. Amer. Syl., 1. p. 75. ; Pursh Fl. Amer. 



Sept., 2. p. 627. 

 Engraving!,, ilichx. Amer. Syl., t. 18. ; and our ^5. 1606. 



Spec. Char., ^-c. Leaves on long footstalks, 

 ovate-lanceolate or oblong, entire or unequally 

 toothed. Cup hemispherical. Nut roundish. 

 (Michx.) A deciduous tree, 30 ft. high, of 

 which only one individual has been found. 

 Banks of the Schuylkill, four miles from 

 Philadelphia. Litroduced ? 1820. Horticul- 

 tural Society's Garden ; and at Verrieres, the 

 villa of M. Vilmorin, near Paris. 



Q. agrifdlia Willd. (described in Arb. Brit., 1st 

 edit., p. 1894., after Pursh and others) appears 

 to be nothing more than Q. coccifera. jg^g_ ^ bct-^-Thyua. 



