CUPULIFEKiE. (oak family.) dO? 



when old, obmate-ohlong, slightly or deeply idmiate-jnnnatifid, the lobes somewhat 

 toothed ; acorn nearly spherical or depressed-globular (J' - i' long) . — Dry woods ; 

 common. — A large tree, often confounded with the next, especially the varie- 

 ties with deeper cut leaves ; but these are duller and thicker, more dilated above 

 the middle, somewhat downy underneath until midsummer, and turning yellow- 

 ish-brown after frost; and the inner bark [qiwcilron of dyers) is very thick and 

 yellow. Wood reddish, coarse-grained, but valuable. 



16. Q. COCCinea^ Wang. (Scaklet Oak.) Leaves oval or oblong in 

 outline, deeply sinuate-pinnatijid, with broad and open sinuses, and divergent sparing- 

 ly cut-toothed lobes (3 - 4 on each side), smooth, bright green and shining both sides, 

 broad or truncate at the base ; acorn omid or globular (i' - 1' long). — llich woods ; 

 common. — A large tree; the long-petioled shining leaves turning bright scarlet 

 in autumn : timber and bark less valuable than in the last. 



++ ++ Cup of fine scales, shallow and saucer-shaped, much shorter than the acorn. 



17. Q« rulll'Sij L. (Ked Oak.) Leaves oblong, snwoth, pale beneath, sinu- 

 atety cut with rather narrow sinuses into short and entire or sparingly toothed acute 

 spreading lobes (4-6 on each side) ; acorn ovoid or oblong, turgid (1' long). (Q. 

 ambigua, Michx.) — Kocky woods ; common. — A good-sized tree, with reddish 

 very porous and coarse-grained wood, of little value as timber. Leaves turning 

 dark red after frost : the sinuses extending scarcely half-way to the midrib. 



18. Q. paliistris, DuBoi. (Swamp Spanish, or Fiir Oak.) Leaves 

 oblong, smooth and shining, bright green both sides, deeply pinnatifid, with broad and 

 rounded sinuses ; the lobes divergent, ctU-lobed and toothed, acute ; acorn globular 

 (scarcely ^' long). — Low grounds, along streams, S. New York to Wisconsin. 

 — A very handsome middle-sized tree, with light and elegant foliage ; the sinuses 

 of the leaves reaching three fourths of the way to the midrib. The timber is 

 better than that of the Eed Oak. 



2. CASTAWEA, Toum. Chestnut. 



Sterile flowers intemiptedly clustered in long and naked cylindrical catkins : 

 calyx 5-6-parted: stamens 8-15: anthers 2-celled. Fertile flowers 2 or 3 to- 

 gether in an ovoid scaly prickly involucre : calyx with a 5 - 6-lobed border crown- 

 ing the 3 - 7-celled 16 - 14-ovuled ovary : abortive stamens 5 - 12 : stigmas bris- 

 tle-shaped, as many as the cells of the ovary. Nuts coriaceous, ovoid, enclosed 

 2-3 together or solitary in the hard coriaceous and very prickly 4-valved invo- 

 lucre. Cotyledons very thick, somewhat plaited, cohering together, remaining 

 underground in germination. — Leaves strongly straight- veined. Flowers ap- 

 pearing later than the (undivided) leaves ; the catkins axillary near the end of 

 the branches, cream-color ; the fertile flowers at their base. (The classical name, 

 from that of a town in Thessaly.) 



1. C. vesca, L. (Chestnut.) Leaves oblong-lanceolate, pointed, seiTate 

 with coarse pointed teeth, smooth and green both sides; nuts 2 or 3 in each involu- 

 cre, therefore flattened on one or both sides. — Kocky or hilly woods, Maine to 

 Michigan and Kentucky; common. June, July. — A large tree, with light 

 coarse-grained wood. The American variety bears smaller and sweeter nnts 

 than the European. (Eu.) 



