Trees or shrubs , deciduous, to 6 m. Bark dark gray, becoming shallowly fissured and scaly, inner bark pinkish. Twigs brown or yellowish brown, 1.5-3 mm diam., pubescent. Terminal buds dark reddish brown, ovoid, 2-4.5 mm, apex puberulent. Leaves: petiole (8-)10-25 mm, pubescent. Leaf blade ovate to elliptic or obovate, 50-120 × 30-90 mm, base cuneate to obtuse, margins with 3-7 acute lobes separated by shallow sinuses and 5-14 awns, apex acute; surfaces abaxially pale green to gray, tomentose, adaxially glossy dark green, glabrous, secondary veins raised on both surfaces. Acorns biennial; cup saucer-shaped to cup-shaped, 5-9 mm high × 10.5-17 mm wide, covering 1/4-1/3(-1/2) nut, outer surface puberulent, inner surface pubescent, scale tips tightly appressed, acute; nut ovoid to subglobose, 9.5-16 × 8-11 mm, striate, puberulent, scar diam. 4.8-7 mm. 2 n = 24.
Flowering spring. Dry, sandy soils and open rocky outcrops; 0-1500 m; Conn., Del., Maine, Md., Mass., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Pa., R.I., Vt., Va., W.Va.
Shrub or small tree to 5 m; twigs of the season thinly hairy or glabrous; lvs oblong or oblong-obovate, 5-10 cm, half or two-thirds as wide, typically with 5 short, broadly triangular lobes, occasionally with an extra pair of small lobes or with toothed lobes, closely and finely gray-tomentulose beneath; petioles 1-3 cm, glabrescent; acorns ovoid, 1.2-2 cm, the cup turbinate or deeply saucer-shaped, covering a third to half the nut, its scales relatively few and large, closely appressed. Rocky, sandy or sterile soil; s. Me. to c. N.Y., O., W.Va., and N.C.
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.