Delaware Trees: A Guide to the Identification of the Native Tree Species |
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Page 141
... trunk diameter of less than 1 ' but may sometimes attain a height of 60 ' and a trunk diameter of 3 ' . Trunk generally stout and divided 8 ' to 10 ' above ground into stout arching branches and tough branchlets drooping or ascending by ...
... trunk diameter of less than 1 ' but may sometimes attain a height of 60 ' and a trunk diameter of 3 ' . Trunk generally stout and divided 8 ' to 10 ' above ground into stout arching branches and tough branchlets drooping or ascending by ...
Page 169
... trunk 1 ' to 21⁄2 ' in diameter , but may occasionally attain a height of 100 ' and a trunk diameter of 5 ' . In forest stands the trunk is usually straight with little taper and clean for the greater portion of its length , ending in a ...
... trunk 1 ' to 21⁄2 ' in diameter , but may occasionally attain a height of 100 ' and a trunk diameter of 5 ' . In forest stands the trunk is usually straight with little taper and clean for the greater portion of its length , ending in a ...
Page 213
... trunk 1 ' to 11⁄2 ' in diameter , but may occasionally reach a height of 70 ' and a trunk diameter of 5 ' . In forest stands the trunk is moderately tall and straight with stout upright branches and branchlets forming a thin irregularly ...
... trunk 1 ' to 11⁄2 ' in diameter , but may occasionally reach a height of 70 ' and a trunk diameter of 5 ' . In forest stands the trunk is moderately tall and straight with stout upright branches and branchlets forming a thin irregularly ...
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Delaware Trees: A Guide to the Identification of the Native Tree Species William Stone Taber No preview available - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
aments apex attain a height axils bark BARK-On old trunks base beneath branches branchlets broad BUDS-Alternate Castle County catkins chestnut clusters colored cone covered crack willow crown dark green deciduous Delaware drooping drupe durable in contact eastern enlarged female flowers fissures FLOWERS-In forest fruit genus GENUS DESCRIPTION-The genus gray growth HABITAT-Prefers hairy heartwood hickory leaf scar leaflets leaves LEAVES-Alternate lenticels light brown light green Linnaeus lobes male margins maturity medullary rays midrib moist soils native natural NORTHERN RED OAK NOTES-The numerous oblong occasionally attain ornamental ovate ovoid panicles petiole pine pistillate pistillate flowers planted pubescent purplish racemes RANGE rarely red-brown reddish brown resinous ridges rounded sapwood scales seed shiny short stalked shrub slender slightly smooth species staminate staminate flower stem Sussex County swamps tall terminal thick thin tomentose toothed tree usually trunk diameter viburnum Winter twig wood WOOD-Diffuse-porous WOOD-Ring-porous yellow yellowish young trunks