304 OAK FAMILY. 



Q. imbric&ria, Laurel or Shingle Oak. Rather sterile soil, from New 

 Jersey W. & S. W. : a middle-sized tree, with laurel-like lance-oblong leaves 

 glossy above, more or less downy beneath. 



■I- H- Leaves imdening upwards, where they are sometimes moderately 3-5-lobed: 

 adorns globidaTf ovoid, small, 



Q. aqu^tica. Water Oak. Wet ground from Maryland S. : a small 

 tree, with very smooth and glossy obovate-spatulate oblanceolate or wedge- 

 oblong leaves long-tapering at base ; cup saucer-shaped. 



Q. nigra, Black-Jaok or Barren Oak. Barrens, from New York S. 

 & W. : low tree (8°- 25° high), with wedge-shaped leaves widely dilated and 

 mostly 3-lobed at summit, but often rounded at the narrow base, rusty-downy 

 beneath, smooth and glossy above ; cup top-shaped, coarse-scaly. 



» * Black and Eed Oaks, with long-petioled and sinuate-lobed or pinnatijid 

 dedduoits leaves. 

 4- Downy beneath even when mature ; cup saucer-shaped with top-shaped base. 



Q. ilicif61ia, Beak or Black Scrub-Oak. Sterile hills and barrens, 

 mostly N. & W. : shrub 3° - 8° high, straggling ; leaves obovate with wedge- 

 shaped base, above angularly 3 - 7-lobed, whitish-downy beneath ; acorn ovoid, 

 barely i' long. 



Q. falc&ta, Spanish Oak. Dry soil. New Jersey to 111. and S. ^ large 

 tree, with oblong leaves obtuse or rounded at base, 3 - 5-lobed above, grayish or 

 yellowish-downy beneath, the lobes mostly narrow and entire or sparingly 

 toothed and somewhat cuiTed ; acorn globular, hardly J' long, 



■I- -I- Mature leaves smooth on both sides or nearly so, generally ovale, oblong, or 

 some of the larger obovate in outline, and varying from sinuately to deeply 

 pinnatijid, turning various shades of red or crimson in late autumn : ivood 

 coarse-grained. 



■w- Leaves with vjedge-shaped base and shyrt petiole, rather thick and coriaceous. 



Q. Catesbsei, Turkey or Barkens Scrub-Oak. Small tree in pine 

 barrens S. : leaves deeply pinnatifid or 3-.5-cleft, the long and narrow or un- 

 equal lobes somewhat scythe-shaped and often nearly entire ; cup very thick 

 and of coarse scales, 1' or less broad, half enclosing the ovoid nut. 



■«• ** Leaves mostly rmn^ed or obtuse at the base, slender-petioled, thinner. 



Q. COCCinea, Scarlet Oak. Dry or barely moist soil : large tree, with 

 gray bark, the interior reddish, rather iirm leaves more or less glossy above and 

 deeply pinnatifid ; cup coarse-scaly, top-shaped or hemispherical with a conical 

 scaly base, covering half or more of the roundish acorn (this J' - 1' long). 



Var. tinct6ria, Quercitron, Yellow-barked, or Black Oak. Bark 

 of trunk darker-colored, thicker, rougher, internally orange (quercitron), and 

 much more valuable to the tanner and dyer ; cup less top-shaped ; leaves less 

 pinnatifid or some of them barely sinuate, thinner, less glossy, and more like 

 those of the next. « 



Q. rtlbra, Red Oak. Common in rich and poor soil : large tree, with 

 dark gray smoothish bark, very coarse reddish wood, and thinnish moderately 

 pinnatifid leaves ; cup saucer-shaped, sessile or on a short and abrupt narrow 

 neck, of fine close scales, very much shorter than the nearly oblong acorn (this 

 1' or less in length). 



Q. paltistris, Swamp Spanish or Pin Oak. Low grounds, only N. : 

 middle-sized tree, with less coarse wood, deeply pinnatifid smooth leaves with 

 their divergent lobes separated by broad and rounded sinuses ; cup flat-saucer- 

 shaped with a short scaly base or stalk, of fine scales, very much shorter than 

 the roundish acorn, which is barely J' in length. 



2. CASTANEA. chestnut. (Classical name, taken from that of a 

 town in Thessaly. ) Flowers in summer, appearing later than the elongated 

 strongly straight-veined and merely serrate leaves. 



C. v^sca, European Chestnut : seldom planted ; large tree, with oblong- 

 lanceolate pointed leaves beset with coarse sharp-pointed teeth, when mature 

 smooth and green both sides ; nuts 2 or 3 in each involucre. 



