Index of Trees
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Needles are in bundles of 5, up to 4 inches long, thin and soft. This tree can grow to 100 feet in height. Originally, large...

Hackberry bark has characteristic corky, irregular, worm-like ridges. Hackberry frequently grows witches’ brooms, or broom-like...

A red oak type with 7 to 11 lobed, bristle-tipped leaves. Sinuses, indentations between lobes, not cut so deeply as with Pin...

Bark is characteristically coarse with deep scale-like ridges. Brownish-black leather seed pods hang on the tree into winter...

A magnificent tree which also makes an excellent large landscape tree. Fall color ranges from yellow-orange to orange-red. Its...

Sycamore bark is thin and exfoliates in plates. The trunk has a characteristically camouflage look. Branches and upper trunk are...

Naturally grows in moist soil along streams and in bottomlands. Trunks of young trees are shiny and peeling, and vary in color...

Bark of older trees is tight, with long, narrow, interlacing ridges. Winter buds are sulfur yellow. Nuts are bitter and...

One of the largest trees of the Indiana forests, Eastern Cottonwood can be extremely fast-growing under favorable conditions. It...

A white oak type most commonly found in the Appalacians on dry, rocky sites. In Indiana, its natural range is restricted to the...

Primarily a southern species, its leaves are star-shaped with 5 lobes, and its seedheads are a distinctive horny sphere. Fall...

A white oak type and a medium sized, long-lived tree found in lowlands and swamps of the north central and northeastern forests...

Widespread across eastern North America, White Oak is also found throughout Indiana except around Lake Michigan. White Oak is...

The tree that “powers our national pastime,” White Ash furnishes the wood from which Louisville Slugger baseball bats are...

Seeds are smooth and dark brown with a large tan attachment scar, the whole seed resembling an eye. Seeds have a prickly husk or...