"Red Pine" "Norway Pine" |
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Description:
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The Largest northeastern
conifer, a magnificent evergreen tree with straight trunk and crown of
horizontal branches, 1 row added a year, becoming broad and irregular.
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Height:
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100', formerly 150' or
more.
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Diameter:
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3-4' or more.
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Leaves:
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Evergreen; 2 1/2-5"
long, 5 in bundle; slender; blue-green.'
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Bark:
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gray; smooth becoming rough;
thick and deeply furrowed into narrow scaly ridges.
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Cones:
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4-8" long; narrowly
cylindrical; yellow-brown; long-stalked; cone-scales thin, rounded, flat.
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Flowers:
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Flowers
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Fruit:
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Fruit
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Habitat:
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Well-drained sandy soils;
sometimes in pure sand.
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Comments:
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The largest conifer
and formerly the most valuable tree of the northeast, Eastern White Pine
is used for construction, millwork, trim, and pulpwood. Younger trees
and plantations have replaced the once seemingly inexhaustible lumber
supply of virgin forests. The tall straight trunks were prized for ship
masts in the colonial period. It is the state tree of Maine, the Pine
Tree State; the pine cone and tassel are the state's floral emblem. The
seeds were introduced in England (where it is called Weymouth Pine) from
Maine in 1605 by Captain George Weymouth of the British Navy.
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