-
genus Carpinus.
American hornbeam is also
known as blue-beech, ironwood,
musclewood and
muscle beech. It is
native to
eastern North America, from Minnesota...
-
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...
- Douglas-fir,
shagbark hickory,
Mexican weeping pine and
laurinate oak. Some
musclewood and
American sweetgum are also present.
Kelly D.
Norris and
William R...
- maple, ash, elm,
eastern red cedar, hackberry, cottonwood, beech, and
musclewood. The
presence of New York
Scalewort is most
obvious on
trees with gray...
-
Betulaceae Carpinus caroliniana Walter: 85–86
American Hornbeam, Ironwood,
Musclewood State-wide
Least Concern Betulaceae Ostrya virginiana (Miller) K. Koch: 86–87 ...
- nigra).
Native understory species include ironwood (Ostrya virginiana),
musclewood (Carpinus caroliniana),
flowering dogwood (Cornus florida), witch-hazel...
-
hornbeams Carpinus caroliniana — ironwood,
American hornbeam, blue beech,
musclewood Carya —
hickories Carya cordiformis —
bitternut hickory,
swamp hickory...
-
black tupelo,
American b****wood,
eastern hop-hornbeam,
black ash, and
musclewood. Ten
shrub species also grow near the lake.
These include three dogwood...
-
sweet pepperbush and,
along the
Hannah Eames Brook,
American hornbeam or “
musclewood” trees. In
warmer weather approximately fifteen species of
ferns can be...
- hill is
dominated by the village's
communal forest:
composed of Oaks,
Musclewoods, Maples, Ashes, Cherries,
Forest Anemones in the spring, Periwinkles...