* Q. €.6 cana major, Q. cana major 
¥ 
Q. C. 7 cana minor. Q. cana minor 
LXX. CORYLA‘CEE : QUE’ RCUS. 857 
718.; Q.calyce hispido, &c., Bauk. Pin, 420. (The plate of this 
tree in drb. Brit., Ist edit., vol. vii. ; and our fig. 1559.)—Leaves on 
longish stalks, ovate-oblong, slightly but copiously sinuated ; downy 
and hoary beneath; lobes short, ovate, acute, entire. Stipules 
shorter than the footstalks. Calyx of the fruit hemispherical, bristly. 
Gd 
j 
1559. @Q. C. austriaca. 
(Snith.) Sir J. E. Smith observes that this tree is “ generally mis- 
taken for Q. Cérris, from which nothing can be more certainly dis- 
tinct ;” we admit their distinctness, but no one who has seen the 
two trees together in the Horticultural Society’s Garden can, we 
think, coubt their being only differ- 
ent forms of the same species. ” 
Austria, Hungary, Carniola, Italy, , 
and other parts of the South of * 
Europe, in stony mountainous 
eee Height and other particu- 
ars as in the species. 
Lodd. Cat. ed. 1836 (fig. 1560.) ; 
the hoary-leaved bitter, or Turkey, eT 
Oak.—Resembles Q. austriaca in < { 
the form of its leaves; but they s2# i AS 
are much more downy beneath. 
1560. Q. C. cana major. 
Lodd. Cat, ed. 1836.—Resembles the preceding kind, but has narrower 
leaves. 
* Q.C. 8 Régnal. Q. Ragnal Lodd. Cat. ed. 1836 ; the Ragnal Oak. 
— This variety has rather narrower and more deeply cut leaves than 
