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63 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
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tulip-poplar
smooth when young, later developing flat-topped ridges and conspicuous white colored furrows in diamond-shaped patterns |
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green ash
interlacing corky ridges forming obvious diamonds |
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Carolina laurelcherry
smooth, gray, with horizontal lenticels |
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Chinese elm
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sugarberry/Georgia hackberry
gray smooth, with irregular, prominent, corky outgrowths sugarberry grows near water, hackberry grows on uplands |
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honeylocust
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osage-orange
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black cherry
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Georgia hackberry
corky outgrowths on bark |
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hazel alder
smooth, gray bark with a lumpy texture; covered in tiny lenticels |
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river birch
orangey-salmony-colored bark with big flakes |
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American hornbeam
bark has a lot of lumps, looks muscle-like/muscular |
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eastern hophornbeam
bark looks like shredded wheat |
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Japanese honeysuckle
when mature, bark is tan and shreddy |
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American elder
prominent lenticels on bark |
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mimosa
smooth bark, greenish or gray in color |
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kudzu
bark gets to be brown and forms tiny, square-like scales |
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black locust
rope-like; when very mature can have very deep fissures |
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chinaberry
when bark is mature, vertical fissures and orange on the inside |
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common persimmon, lab 6
"zebra bark" |
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thorny-olive
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autumn-olive
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sourwood
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American beech
smooth, gray bark |
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blackgum
bark gray-brown and shallowly, irregularly furrowed, on old stems it can become quite blocky, resembling alligator hide |
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serviceberry
dark gray bark often with a twisted look to it |
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flowering dogwood
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American chestnut or Allegheny chinquapin
affected by blight or splitting bark |
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royal paulownia
grayish, tannish has large lenticels |
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rusty blackhaw
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sparkleberry
gray and shreddy bark, with red patches on mature |
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Elliott's blueberry
mature bark is red and shreddy |
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Chickasaw plum
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black willow
dark shaggy ridges and exfoliating when mature |
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sassafras
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muscadine grape
smooth, dark greenish bark later developing vertical grooves |
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silky dogwood
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eastern hemlock
reddish brown
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American sycamore
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eastern cottonwood
almost looks like sourwood bark but more gray |
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horse-sugar
bark grayish-green or brown, developing splits with age |
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slippery elm
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chalk maple
bark is smooth and light gray to chalky white on upper trunk but furrowed and dark brown near ground on mature |
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mountain-laurel
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black walnut
purplish colored
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Carolina silverbell
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mock-orange
light brown, coarsely shreddy; papery shreds |
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yellow cucumbertree
light gray-brown flaky, quite soft |
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American holly bark always looks thin, gray, and smooth |
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wax-myrtle thin, smooth, gray-brown bark, covered in tiny lenticels |
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slash pine reddish-brown, platy bark, more scales |
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longleaf pine
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eastern redbud
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honeylocust
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boxelder gray to light brown
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royal paulownia grayish, tannish has large lenticels |
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blackgum gray-brown shallowly, irregularly furrowed, on old stems it can become quite blocky, resembling alligator hide |
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eastern redcedar |
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baldcypress |
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eastern redbud when older, bark is ridged and furrowed to scaly and dark gray, possibly with maroon patches and orange in the cracks |
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black locust gray or light brown
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basswood initially gray-green then gray-brown
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American elm dark, ashy gray
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