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Definition of Monterey pine
1. Noun. Tall California pine with long needles in bunches of 3, a dense crown, and dark brown deeply fissured bark.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Monterey Pine
Literary usage of Monterey pine
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Outdoor Heritage by Harold Child Bryant (1919)
"The Monterey pine is found only near the coast from San Francisco Bay to central
Monterey County, a-range of 130 miles. In the southern part of its range it ..."
2. Handbook of West-American Cone-bearers by John Gill Lemmon (1900)
"... hence tall and slender; maturing fruit when quite young. Leaves in 3's or 2's.
Four Species:— No. 22—Monterey pine • P- radiata, Don. 1837. ..."
3. Nature and Science on the Pacific Coast: A Guide-book for Scientific by Pacific Coast Committee (1915)
"The Monterey pine (Pinus radiata) has a similar interest. It forms the local
forest at Monterey and also occurs in a number of other "islands" along ..."
4. Nature and Science on the Pacific Coast: A Guide-book for Scientific by Pacific Coast Committee, Betty Hoag McGlynn (1915)
"The Monterey pine (Pinus radiata) has a similar interest. It forms the local
forest at Monterey and also occurs in a number of other "islands" along the ..."
5. The Silva of California by Willis Linn Jepson (1910)
"The greatest enemy of the Monterey pine is a borer which infests the , trunks.
... Monterey pine belongs to the interesting group of closed-cone pines, ..."
6. The Proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science by Iowa Academy of Science (1906)
"A large number of trees have been planted and the most satisfactory are the
Monterey pine and the Monterey cypress, which are native to that immediate ..."
7. The Proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science by Iowa Academy of Science (1906)
"A large number of trees have been planted and the most satisfactory are the
Monterey pine and the Monterey cypress, which are native to that immediate ..."