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Definition of Canadian red pine
1. Noun. Pine of eastern North America having long needles in bunches of two and reddish bark.
Definition of Canadian red pine
1. Noun. a pine tree found in eastern North America having long needles and reddish bark ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Canadian Red Pine
Literary usage of Canadian red pine
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ship-building in Iron and Wood by Andrew Murray, Robert Murray, Augustin Francis Bullock Creuze (1863)
"It is a resinous and flexible wood ; but the sticks are more subject than the
canadian red pine to the defect of large knots, which, from not being firmly ..."
2. The Materials of Engineering by Robert Henry Thurston (1884)
"The canadian red pine (Pinus resinosa) is found growing on the poorer soils of
the northern portion of the United States, and in Canada, reaching a height ..."
3. Wood: A Manual of the Natural History and Industrial Applications of the by George Simonds Boulger (1908)
"See Pine, Canadian Red. Pine, Red, of Australia. See Cypress Pine. Pine, Red, of
New Zealand. See Rimu. Pine, Rock. See Cypress Pine. Pine, Rosemary. ..."
4. Wood and Other Organic Structural Materials by Charles Henry Snow (1917)
"canadian red pine (Eng.). LOCALITIES. Southern Canada, northern United States
from Maine to Minnesota; Pennsylvania. FEATURES OF TREE. ..."
5. A Text-book of the Materials of Construction, for Use in Technical and by Robert Henry Thurston (1885)
"... when the hygrometric state of the atmosphere changes considerably. For many
purposes its softness is a serious objection. The canadian red pine (Pinus ..."
6. The Forester: A Practical Treatise on British Forestry and Arboriculture for by John Nisbet (1905)
"... American or canadian red pine," and is strong and durable, being used for the
same purposes as Scots Pine. It cuts up in fine clean scantlings and ..."
7. A Treatise on Non-metallic Materials of Engineering: Stone, Timber, Fuel by Robert H. Thurston (1903)
"... the hygrometric state of the atmosphere changes considerably. For many purposes
its softness is a serious objection. 51. The canadian red pine (Pinus ..."