
Oe fase 
MONOECIA, POLYANDRIA. 71 4 ; 
_§ 2. Fructification annual; leaves awnless. 
¢ Leaves lobed. 
13. Q. leaves oblong, scolloped, cuneate at base, pu- ebtusiloba. 
bescent beneath : lobes obtuse, upper ones dila- 
ted, 2-lobed: cup hemispherical; acorn oval. 
—Mich. fl. Amer. and Pursh. 
Q. stellata, Willd. and Wangh. 
Icon. Mich. Querc. No. 1. t. 1. Mich. Arb. fo- 
rest. 2. t. 4. 
Upland White Oak. Iron Oak. Barren White Oak. 
Post Oak. 
In barren woods. h. May. 
i4. Q. leaves oblong, pinnatifid-sinuate, pubes- alba. 
cent beneath : lobes linear-lanceolate, obtuse, 
very entire, attenuated at the base; fruit pe- 
dunculated; cup sub-craterate, tuberculate, 
flat at the base ; acorn ovate.—Hilld. and Pursh. 
Icon. Mich. f. Arbr. forest. vol. 2. t. 1. 
White Oak. 
One of the commonest, and a very useful species. h. May. 
pean 
tT Leaves entire, toothed. 
15. Q. leaves on long petioles, obovate, acute, pu- Prinus. 
bescent beneath, deeply dentated ; teeth nearly 
equal, dilated, point callous; cup craterate, 
narrowed at base; acorn ovate.—Willd. and 
Pursh. 
Q. Prinus palustris, Mich. fl. Am. 
Icon. Mich. Querc. n. 5. t. 6. Mich. f. Arbr. 
forest. 2. t. 7. Catesby. Car. 1. t. 18. 
mat 
Chesnut White Oak. Swamp Chesnut Oak. er 
On the banks of the Schuylkill, above the falls. Fruit e 
large. kh. May. 
