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  2. Elms in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elms_in_Australia

    The cultivation of elms in Australia began in the first half of the 19th century, when British settlers imported species and cultivars from their former homelands. Owing to the demise of elms in the northern hemisphere as a result of the Dutch elm disease pandemic, the mature trees in Australia 's parks and gardens are now regarded as amongst ...

  3. Ulmus minor 'Stricta' - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_minor_'Stricta'

    Elms supplied as 'Cornubiensis', St. Stephen's Church, Mittagong, NSW [7] A cultivar supplied as 'Cornubiensis' remains in cultivation in Australia, but Spencer, describing it in Horticultural Flora of South-Eastern Australia (1995), noted that it was not type-'Stricta'. He gave as an example the elms beside St. Stephen's Church, Mittagong, NSW ...

  4. Google Maps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Maps

    Google Maps' location tracking is regarded by some as a threat to users' privacy, with Dylan Tweney of VentureBeat writing in August 2014 that "Google is probably logging your location, step by step, via Google Maps", and linked users to Google's location history map, which "lets you see the path you've traced for any given day that your ...

  5. Elm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elm

    Elms are deciduous and semi-deciduous trees comprising the genus Ulmus in the family Ulmaceae. They are distributed over most of the Northern Hemisphere, inhabiting the temperate and tropical - montane regions of North America and Eurasia, presently ranging southward in the Middle East to Lebanon and Israel, [ 1 ] and across the Equator in the ...

  6. Ulmus minor subsp. minor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_minor_subsp._minor

    In a more academically-based project, most of the clones of the surviving European field elms that have been tested since the 1990s for innate resistance to Dutch elm disease by national research institutes in the EU, with a view to returning field elm to cultivation in Europe, [23] would be classified by Richens’s system as Ulmus minor subsp ...

  7. List of elm cultivars, hybrids and hybrid cultivars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Elm_cultivars...

    The starting-points for List of elm cultivars, hybrids and hybrid cultivars were fourfold: (1) Green's 'Registration of Cultivar Names in Ulmus ' (1964), [1] based on the contemporary nomenclature of elm species and wild hybrids; (2) Krüssmann's confirmation or correction of cultivar-names in his monumental Handbuch der Laubgehölze (1976); [2] (3) Heybroek's table of Netherlands research ...

  8. Bentinck Street Elm Trees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bentinck_Street_Elm_Trees

    English elms were favoured/ planted between c. 1880 and c. 1920 – corresponding with the date of Bentinck Street's elms. Elms are a defining tree of the c. – c. 1900 ('Federation') era in Bathurst and a number of inland Australian and NSW country towns of this period (e.g.: Ballarat, Bendigo, Albury, Orange, Wagga Wagga).

  9. Ulmus laevis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulmus_laevis

    Ulmus laevis Pall., variously known as the European white elm, [2] fluttering elm, spreading elm, stately elm and, in the United States, the Russian elm, is a large deciduous tree native to Europe, from France [3] northeast to southern Finland, east beyond the Urals into Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, and southeast to Bulgaria and the Crimea; there are also disjunct populations in the Caucasus and ...