LXX. CORYLA CEE: QUE’RCUS. ag5 
Q. pallida Blume 
Fi. Jav. t.4. and 5.; 
and our jigs. 1652. 
and 1653. The pale 
Oak.— Leaves oval- 
oblong, very much 
pointed; acute at the 
base, quite entire ; 
glabrous ; pale-colour- 
ed beneath. Catkins 
terminal, dicecious ; 
the male catkins 
branched, fastigiate ; 
the female ones sim- 
ple. A tree, from 
50 ft. to 60 ft. high ; 
flowering in June and 
July. Found near the 
sources of the river 
Tjibarrum, in the 
mountains of Gedé. ( Blume.) 
Q. costata Blume F'. Jav. t. 13, 14.; and our jigs. 1654. and 1658.d,e. The 
ribbed-cupped Oak.—Leaves oblong, acuminate ; acute at the base; glabrous; 
glaucous beneath. Catkins branched. Fruit peduncled. Nuts flat above, 
round beneath, immersed in the cup. Cups without teeth, surrounded by 
circular ribs. A tree, 70 ft. high, found in mountainous places. It is easily 
distinguished from all the others by the singular form of its cup. 
Q. rotundata Blume FI. Jav. t.11.; and our fig. 1655. The round-fruited 
Oak.—Leaves oblong, acuminate; attenuated at the base ; glabrous; glaucous 
beneath. Fruit in short one-sided spikes. Cups hemispherical, scaly at the 
1652. Q. pallida. 1653. Q. pallida. 
1655. Q. rotundata, 
