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Larix kaempferi, the Japanese larch [2] or karamatsu (唐松 or 落葉松) in Japanese, is a species of larch native to Japan, in the mountains of Chūbu and Kantō regions in central Honshū. [3] It is a medium-sized to large deciduous coniferous tree reaching 20–40 m tall, with a trunk up to 1 m diameter. The crown is broad conic; both the ...
The hybrid Larix × marschlinsii Coaz (syn. L. × eurolepis), the Dunkeld larch, a spontaneous artificial hybrid L. decidua × L. kaempferi that arose more or less simultaneously in Switzerland and Scotland in 1901–1904, [17] is by far the best known, being of major importance in forestry in northern Europe. Larix × pendula (Sol.) Salisb.
The following year her heirs donated the estate to the art museum along with a $100,000 endowment to maintain the house. A $1.5 million renovation of the facility was completed in 2017. [2] In 2021, a grant from the Iowa Department of Cultural affairs to restore the historic Japanese-style garden was announced. [4]
Dodgeville's old downtown, including the 1859 Greek Revival Iowa County Courthouse, [27] the 1888 Italianate-styled Ford hardware store, [28] the 1901 Queen Anne Auditorium (opera house), [29] the 1919 Neoclassical-styled First National Bank, [30] the 1922 Commercial Craftsman Pollard harness shop, [31] and the 1940 Art Deco Commonwealth ...
The unveiling will be Dec. 18 at 5:30 p.m. at the trailhead depot, 2 Main St. S.E.
Larix decidua * Japanese larch Larix kaempferi * Coast Douglas-fir Pseudotsuga menziesii * Western hemlock Tsuga heterophylla * Silver fir Abies alba * Grand fir Abies grandis * Noble fir Abies procera * Deodar cedar Cedrus deodara * Lebanon cedar Cedrus libani var atlantica *
Radiocarbon dates on 6 samples from the Lane site ranged from A.D. 1426-1660 and Huber sites such as Oak Forest show a similar date range, with associated European trade goods. [14] An Allamakee Trailed vessel has been reported from early Historic contexts at the Rock Island II Site in Door County, Wisconsin, situated in Green Bay (Lake Michigan).
The Laricoideae are a subfamily of the Pinaceae, a Pinophyta division family. They take their name from the genus Larix (), which contains inside most of the species of the group and is one of only two deciduous genera of the pines complex (together with Pseudolarix, which however belongs to a different subfamily, the Abietoideae).