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  2. Acacia pendula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_pendula

    Acacia pendula, commonly known as the weeping myall, [1] true myall, myall, silver-leaf boree, [2] boree, [1] and nilyah, [3] is a species of wattle, which is native to Australia. The 1889 book The Useful Native Plants of Australia records that common names included "Weeping Myall", "True Myall", and Indigenous people of western areas of New ...

  3. Acacia papyrocarpa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acacia_papyrocarpa

    Western myall typically grows as a shrub or an upright tree to a height of 2 to 8 m (6 ft 7 in to 26 ft 3 in) but can grow as tall as 10 m (33 ft). It has fissured grey coloured bark [1] and a dense spreading to rounded crown. [2] It has pendulous and hairy branchlets. Like most Acacia species, it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. These ...

  4. Myall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myall

    Acacia binervia, commonly known as coast myall; A. papyrocarpa, commonly known as western myall; a weeping form of the species, commonly known as water myall; A. pendula, commonly known as weeping myall, true myall, or myall; A. sibilans, commonly known as northern myall. Note: Myall Muona, 1993 is a beetle genus in the subfamily Eucneminae

  5. South Shields' weeping beech tree saved by local petition - AOL

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  7. Weeping Myall Woodlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weeping_Myall_Woodlands

    The Weeping Myall Woodlands is an endangered ecological community, under the EPBC Act of the Commonwealth of Australia. [1] It is found in inland Queensland and inland New South Wales, [1] on alluvial plains west of the Great Dividing Range. [2] It takes its name from Acacia pendula, the weeping myall.