150 MONOECIA— POLYANDRIA. Fagus. 



2. Q. sessUiflora. Sessile-fruited Oak. 



Leaves on elongated stalks, deciduous, oblong; with op- 

 posite, acute sinuses. Fi'uit sessile. 



Q. sessiliflora. 8aVish. Prodr. 392. Fl. Br. 1026. Engl. Bot. v. 26. 



f. 1845. Hook. Scot.273. 

 Q. sessilis. Ehrh. Arh. 87. 

 Q. Robur. V/illd. Sp. PL v. 4. 450. Baumz. 277. Huds. 421, jS. 



Mart. Rust. t. \\. sessile variety. 

 Q. latifolia mas, quae brevi pediculo est. Raii Syn. 440. 

 Q. platyphyllos. Dalech. Hist. 3.f. 

 jS. Durmast Oak. Mart. Rust. t.\2. " 



In woods, less common than the foregoing. 



In Bagley wood, and divers other places, first observed by Mr. 

 Bobart. Ray. In many parts of Norfolk j also about London. 



/3. In the New Forest^ Hampshire. Martyn. Sussex. Mr. Borrer 

 and Mr. Lyell. 



Tree. April, May. 



The wood of this species being far inferior to the true Q. Robur in 

 quality, it is highly important to distinguish them, though long 

 considered as varieties. The leaves of the present have longer, 

 more slender, footstalks, and are more equally and regularly 

 pinnatifid ; in the variety j3 they are downy underneath, and 

 generally thought more lasting, or inclined to be evergreen. 

 The most clear and indisputable specific character, noticed by 

 the older writers, consists in the fertile flowers having little or 

 no stalks, which difference exists likewise in the Acorns. Those 

 writers however do not appear to have been aware of the infe- 

 rior value of the timber. Professor Martyn has given some re- 

 marks on this subject, highly worthy of notice. 



443. FAGUS. Beech and Chesnut. 



Linn. Gen. 496. Juss. 409. Fl.Br.\027. Tourn.t.So]. Lam. 



t. 782. Gcertn. t. 37. 

 Castanea. Tourn.t. 352. Gcertn. t. 37. 



Nat. Ord. see n. 442. 



Barr. fl. either few, in a short roundish catlciyi ,- or nume- 

 rous, in a long cylindrical one. Cal. of one leaf, in 5 or 

 6 segments. Cor. none. Filam. 5 — 20, or more, capil- 

 lary, longer than the calyx. Anth. roundish, or oblong, 

 of 2 lobes. 



Fert.ji. stalked. Cal. double, both permanent; outer one 

 inferior, coriaceous, externally prickly, in 4, 5, or 6 deep 

 segments, containing 2 or 3 flowers ; inner superior, of 

 1 leaf^ in 5 or 6 deep segments, internally woolly. Cor. 



