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  2. Yard light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yard_light

    Yard light-garden lantern with multiple lamps.. A yard light or garden lantern is a free standing exterior light fixture in gardens and landscaped settings. They are usually illuminated by electricity, but occasionally natural gas, and are usually placed near an outdoor path or driveway to provide visibility in dark areas or areas that become dark at certain times.

  3. Euceraphis betulae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euceraphis_betulae

    Euceraphis betulae, the birch aphid or silver birch aphid, is a species of aphid in the order Hemiptera.It is a tiny green insect with a soft body and wings. It is found living on the European silver birch tree (Betula pendula) where it feeds and multiplies on the buds and leaves by sucking sap.

  4. Betula occidentalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betula_occidentalis

    Betula occidentalis, the water birch or red birch, is a species of birch native to western North America, in Canada from Yukon east to Northwestern Ontario and southwards, and in the United States from eastern Washington east to western North Dakota, [citation needed] and south to eastern California, northern Arizona and northern New Mexico, and southwestern Alaska.

  5. Wiigwaasi-makak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiigwaasi-makak

    A wiigwaasi-makak (plural: wiigwaasi-makakoon), meaning "birch-bark box" in the Anishinaabe language, is a box made of panels of birchbark sewn together with watap. The construction of makakoon from birchbark was an essential element in the culture of the Anishinaabe people and other members of the Native Americans and First Nations of the ...

  6. Betula nigra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betula_nigra

    Betula nigra, the black birch, river birch or water birch, is a species of birch native to the Eastern United States from New Hampshire west to southern Minnesota, and south to northern Florida and west to Texas. It is one of the few heat-tolerant birches in a family of mostly cold-weather trees which do not thrive in USDA Zone 6 and up.

  7. Hornbeam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornbeam

    The common English name hornbeam derives from the hardness of the woods (likened to horn) and the Old English beam, "tree" (cognate with Dutch Boom and German Baum).. The American hornbeam is also occasionally known as blue-beech, ironwood, or musclewood, the first from the resemblance of the bark to that of the American beech Fagus grandifolia, the other two from the hardness of the wood and ...