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Eastern white pines are noted for holding their needles well, even long after being harvested.
There's an interactive video game and real Eastern White Pine tree trunks.
There are also Eastern White Pines, but a few were selectively logged around 1900.
The area surrounding the river, originally covered with Eastern White Pine, is now mainly used for agriculture.
The sites retain 200-year-old Eastern White Pines; thus the parks are significant from the perspectives of both human and natural history.
Originally most of the land was forested with large eastern white pines, but was denuded by loggers.
Logging companies had taken interest in the abundant Eastern White Pine that grew in the area.
Eastern white pines are dominant, with red pines clustered atop the sandstone cliffs along the water's edge.
The range is located in eastern White Pine County of central-eastern Nevada.
An Eastern White Pine, the state tree of Michigan, is located in the front of the building.
Eastern White Pine was historically the dominant tree species in the surrounding forest prior to intensive logging at the end of the nineteenth century.
These Eastern White Pine are some of the largest trees in the eastern United States.
Today middle-successional species like birch and aspen are more prevalent than the Norway and eastern white pines that would have originally dominated the area.
He earned the nickname "the pine tree painter" for his numerous depictions of Eastern White Pine trees.
Most of the vegetation today is second-growth forest, with some sections dominated by maples and basswoods and others by eastern white pines.
An important export up until the 1850s was Eastern White Pine trunks which were used as masts on Royal Navy vessels.
They assisted loggers to move Eastern White Pine timber down the wider sections of the Ottawa River.
Michigan state tree: Eastern White Pine (Pinus strobus)
The Gilpin's trusses, floorbeams, ties and lateral bracing systems are framed almost entirely of Eastern White Pine.
For example, the eastern North American species S. spraguei grows in association with Eastern White Pine.
The united Iroquois nations are symbolized by an Eastern White Pine tree, called the Tree of Peace.
Interlochen State Park for the two remaining stands of virgin Eastern White Pine in the Lower Peninsula.
The branches of the Eastern White Pine are also widely used in making holiday wreaths and garland because of their soft, feathery needles.
Prior to European settlement, the area was dominated by the old-growth Eastern White Pine which was completely harvested around the beginning of the twentieth century.
By the mid-19th century, the demand for lumber reached the area, where Eastern White Pine and Eastern Hemlock covered the surrounding mountainsides.
US 93 Alternate begins at Lages Station in northern White Pine County.
Cherry Creek is a historic mining town located in northern White Pine County, in northeastern Nevada in the western United States.
Ruby Valley is a large basin located in south-central Elko and northern White Pine Counties in the northeastern section of the state of Nevada in the western United States.
The Cherry Creek Range is a line of mountains, Basin and Range faulted, in northern White Pine and southern Elko Counties, in northeastern Nevada in the western United States.
The areas that were overgrown with Weymouth Pines were cleared.
Conifers include some Weymouth Pine dating from 1781, Norway spruce, douglas fir and larch.
The white pine,Pinus strobus, also from America and known in this country as the Weymouth Pine, impressed Miller both for its beauty and utility.
In this role he is reputed to have introduced the Lord Weymouth Pine (Pinus strobus), in 1705 and planted it extensively on the estate at Longleat.
In Britain, the North American tree species Pinus strobus is referred to as the "Weymouth Pine", in honor of George Weymouth.
The park accounts for over 2,000 types of trees and brush (local and exotic) among which are taxodium (marsh cypress), Weymouth Pine, tulip tree, platanus, ginkgo, and many others.
Its important trees include a Giant Redwood, a Weymouth Pine, a Mexican White Pine, an Ernest's Fir and a Chilean Incense Cedar.
Some of the first plantings of the Giant Redwood and the Weymouth Pine amongst other "exotics" imported to the UK were made here by Sir William Miles in the 1860s.
The Lord Weymouth Pine was useful for ship masts in that it grew tall and slender, but in truth this was a bit of a cheat, in that the name really derived from George Weymouth, totally unrelated, who first discovered this pine growing in Maine.
This is a wild but beautiful spot, among rough boulders and soft pines, about which the most weird and fantastic tale might be woven.
Arkansas Soft Pine Bureau - Google Books edition.
In 1918, the Arkansas Soft Pine Bureau released a 32 page portfolio featuring houses built from Seyfarth's designs.
North- and westward it is reported to on various other pines, including both hard (two-and three-needled species) and soft pines (usually five-needled species).
Soft pines and cedars appeared in copses and single sentinels; draws and gullies entered the valley from either side, each with its trickle of a stream.
The larvae feed on hard and soft pines (especially Scrub pine and Virginia Pine in the south) and rarely on larch.
Among North American pines the sheath is persistent in all so-called hard pines and deciduous in all so-called soft pines.
For example, Dr. Vander Wall has reported, certain soft pines with wingless seeds that are not otherwise readily dispersed have evolved to produce cones with highly nutritious, large seeds that are easily harvested by jays and nutcrackers.
In areas that have not recently burned, white pines (Pinus strobus) may be prominent.
It grows in association with pines, particularly eastern white pine (Pinus strobus).
The larvae mainly feed on Pinus strobus.
These trees are sometimes joined by hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) or white pine (Pinus strobus).
The larvae feed in the cones of Pinus strobus and Pinus virginiana.
Pinus strobus (N)
(Pinus strobus) A species typically favored for wooden bridge framing in areas of the country where it was found, for its strength to weight ratio.
Michigan state tree: Eastern White Pine (Pinus strobus)
Of the white pine, for instance, the second volume notes: "Pinus strobus is an important timber tree; because of extensive lumbering, few uncut stands remain.
Small signs at knee height announced them as pinus strobus, pinus palustris and pinus nigra.
White pine (Pinus strobus) and red pine (Pinus resinosa), are also an important part of this mixed forest.
White Pines (Pinus strobus) - about 150 eastern white pines were planted in 1952 and compliment the much older stands throughout the Arb.
The most common woods cut in New Zealand are radiata pine (Pinus radiata), poplar and Pinus strobus.
MBG:Pinus strobus 'Macopin'
Larval foods include Jack Pine (Pinus banksiana) and White Pine (Pinus strobus).
In the northeastern United States, for example, there are frequent stories published in newspapers and magazines dating from the 1800's telling of extremely tall white pines (Pinus strobus).
In this role he is reputed to have introduced the Lord Weymouth Pine (Pinus strobus), in 1705 and planted it extensively on the estate at Longleat.
Also present are jack pine (Pinus banksiana), and white pine (Pinus strobus) which is found in areas of richer soil in the lower elevations of this forest.
Subspecies koraiensis can be found on Pinus koraiensis, Pinus densiflora, Pinus strobus and Pinus pumila.
As an introduced species, Pinus strobus is now naturalizing in the Outer Eastern Carpathians subdivision of the Carpathian Mountains, in the Czech Republic and southern Poland.
If the weeping form of the Atlas cedar proves too difficult to find, then an equally showy, but more easily obtainable, tree is the pendulous form of the white pine (Pinus strobus pendula).
The larvae feed on Juniperus scopulorum, Juniperus communis, Thuja plicata, Populus balsamifera trichocarpa, Pinus strobus, Pinus contorta var.
Invasive garlic mustard, Alliaria petiolata, and its allelochemical benzyl isothiocyanate were shown to inhibit the growth of three species of EcM fungi grown on white pine (Pinus strobus) seedlings.
A two-value TDI using height and girth was presented for 259 white pines (Pinus strobus) by Friends of Mohawk Trail State Forest to MA DCNR in 2006.
In the northeast part of its range, it is often found with sweet birch (Betula lenta) and in the northern part of its range it is occasionally found with white pine (Pinus strobus).