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Definition of Picea engelmannii
1. Noun. Tall spruce of Rocky Mountains and British Columbia with blue-green needles and acutely conic crown; wood used for rough lumber and boxes.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Picea Engelmannii
Literary usage of Picea engelmannii
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Dwarf Mistletoes: Biology, Pathology, and Systematics by Frank G. Hawksworth, Delbert Wiens (1998)
"W of Redfeather Lakes, on picea engelmannii, H 189 in 1961 (FPF); 4 mi. W of
Redfeather Lakes on picea engelmannii, H 406 in 1963 (FPF); SE of Chambers Lake ..."
2. The Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture: A Discussion for the Amateur, and by Liberty Hyde Bailey (1916)
"... and these are younger). This shows that the leaves persisted six or seven years.
picea engelmannii, one of the gems of Colorado, resembles P. ..."
3. Botanical Gazette by University of Chicago, JSTOR (Organization) (1916)
"... picea engelmannii Pinus monticola Thuja plicata Betula papyrifera Abies ...
Dryopteris Thalictrum occidentalis Disporum majus picea engelmannii is the ..."
4. The Proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science by Iowa Academy of Science (1903)
"The dwarf picea engelmannii and Abies subalpina are common above the timber line.
The Engelmann spruce extending up further than Abies subalpina. ..."
5. Biodiversity and the Management of the Madrean Archipelago: The Sky Islands edited by Leonard F. DeBano (1999)
"The 1974 census was conducted in September by searching for the above plants
along the Crest Trail and at other trailside locations where picea engelmannii ..."
6. Memoirs by Horticultural Society of New York (1904)
"picea engelmannii, reaching its perfection much further north, where conditions
are quite different from those prevailing here, is hardy, ..."
7. Forestry Quarterly by New York State College of Forestry (1911)
"... picea engelmannii, pun- gens. Himalaya Mountains, Eastern, 8250 to 9,- 570
ft.; Western, 6,- 600 ft to 8250 ft ?; ?; ?; ?; ?; ?; not under 50°. ..."