Your Guide to US States - SHG Resources: Profiles data, sorted by topics and US states such as state agencies, colleges, education, economy, government, history, media, symbols, statistics, facts, and figures.
LET LENDERS COMPETE FOR YOUR LOAN NEEDS
Loan Type Location Type  
Home  Agencies  Channels  Chat  Colleges & Universities  Columnists  Financial Services  Forums  Gemstones  Home Services  Local Venue  Money Auction  Movies Reviews  Newspapers  Personals  Radio Stations  Search  Site Guide  State Symbols  Television Stations  Traffic Center  Travel  US States
State History Guide

State Symbols: Official State Tree Designations of the 50 States.

State Trees

Trees, US 50

 

Symbols, US 50

 


Symbols

 

My North Carolina

 

 

North Carolina Symbols, Tree: Longleaf Pine

 

eSylvan

Online Tutoring Programs

 

Request More Information

eSylvan's award-winning online tutoring is guaranteed to improve your child’s reading and math skills.  It will also boost their self-confidence. With personalized instruction from caring, state-certified teachers, learning at home is fun, easy, and effective.  Help your child today with this accredited, low-risk and affordable solution.

 

Longleaf PineState Tree, a state symbol

(Pinaceae Pinus palustris)
Adopted in 1963.

The pine was officially designated as the State Tree by the General Assembly of 1963. (Session Laws, 1963, c. 41).

The pine is the most common of the trees found in North Carolina, as well as the most important one in the history of our State. During the Colonial and early Statehood periods, the pine was a vital part of the economy of North Carolina. From it came many of the "naval stores" - resin, turpentine, and timber - needed by merchants and the navy for their ships. The pine has continued to supply North Carolina with many important wood products, particularly in the building industry.

Longleaf pine (Pinus palustris), whose species name means "of the marsh," has been locally referred to as longstraw, yellow, southern yellow, swamp, hard or heart, pitch, and Georgia pine. In presettlement times, this premier timber and naval stores tree grew in extensive pure stands throughout the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains. At one time the longleaf pine forest may have occupied as much as 24 million ha (60 million acres), although by 1985 less than 1.6 million ha (4 million acres) remained.

Leaf: Evergreen, very long and feathery (8 to 18 inches long), with three dark green needles per fascicle.

Flower: Monoecious; males yellow-red, long, in clusters; females oval, purple.

Fruit: Very large (largest cone in the Eastern U. S. --6 to 10 inches long), ovoid to conical in shape, sessile. Scales are red-brown in color. The umbo is armed with a curved prickle. Maturing September to October.

Twig: Very stout, brown, with large obvious, asbestos-white buds.

Bark: Quite scaly, orange-brown to gray, will eventually develop plates.

Form: A medium-sized tree with a straight trunk, coarse branches and tufted needles at ends of branches.

Kingdom Plantae -- Plants
Subkingdom Tracheobionta -- Vascular plants
  Superdivision   Spermatophyta -- Seed plants
     Division   Coniferophyta – Conifers
       Class   Pinopsida –
            Order Pinales –
               Family Pinaceae – Pine family
                  Genus Pinus L. – pine
                   Species Pinus palustris P. Mill. – longleaf pine

Source:
Dendrology at Virginia Tech
U.S. Department of Agriculture

 

 

 
Google

State Symbols

State Flag - Click for the history, official description, and picture of the state flag


Symbols Index

Bird

Flag

Seal

Almanac

Flower

Names

Tree

History

History Timeline


Elected Officials

 

The World Almanac for Kids Online!

 

National Forests


Croatan, Nantahala, Pisgah, and Uwharrie National Forests

 

 

Profiles resources and data , sorted by topics and by US states

 

Directory About Partners: PR5  | PR5-1 | PR5-2  Policies Privacy Terms of Service

® Copyright 2009, SHG, LLC, All rights reserved,

Please report problems with this web site to the webmaster@shgresources.com