enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Oleaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oleaceae

    Syringaceae Horan. Oleaceae, also known as the olive family or sometimes the lilac family, is a taxonomic family of flowering shrubs, trees, and a few lianas in the order Lamiales. [1] It presently comprises 28 genera, one of which is recently extinct. [2] The extant genera include Cartrema, which was resurrected in 2012. [3]

  3. List of olive cultivars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_olive_cultivars

    It is used mostly for oils. Bouteillan. France. a cultivar grown in France for olive oil. Cailletier (Taggiasca) France, Italy. grown primarily in the Alpes-Maritimes region near Nice and in nearby Liguria in Italy, where it is known as Taggiasca. When processed for salads it is known as Niçoise. Calabria.

  4. Olive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive

    19th-century illustration. The olive tree, Olea europaea, is an evergreen tree or shrub native to Mediterranean Europe, Asia, and Africa. It is short and squat and rarely exceeds 8–15 m (25–50 ft) in height. 'Pisciottana', a unique variety comprising 40,000 trees found only in the area around Pisciotta in the Campania region of southern ...

  5. What Are Kalamata Olives? Here’s Everything You Need to Know ...

    www.aol.com/kalamata-olives-everything-know...

    BRETT STEVENS/Getty Images. Kalamata olives are a widely recognized and much-loved type of Greek olive that grow on the Kalamon tree and hail from the Peloponnese region in southern Greece.(Note ...

  6. Olea paniculata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olea_paniculata

    Native olive, foliage & fruit. Olea paniculata, commonly known as the native olive, is a plant of the genus Olea and a relative of the olive. It grows natively in Pakistan and southwestern China (Yunnan) through tropical Asia to Australia (Queensland and New South Wales) and the Pacific islands of New Caledonia, Vanuatu and Lord Howe Island.

  7. Olea oleaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olea_oleaster

    Olea oleaster, the wild-olive, has been considered by various botanists a valid species and a subspecies [1] of the cultivated olive tree, Olea europea, which is a tree of multiple origins [2] that was domesticated, it now appears, at various places during the fourth and third millennia BCE, in selections drawn from varying local populations. [3]

  8. Olea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olea

    Olea (/ ˈoʊliə / OH-lee-ə[3]) is a genus of flowering plants in the family Oleaceae. It includes 12 species native to warm temperate and tropical regions of the Middle East, southern Europe, Africa, southern Asia, and Australasia. [2] They are evergreen trees and shrubs, with small, opposite, entire leaves. The fruit is a drupe.

  9. Olea capensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olea_capensis

    Olea capensis. Olea capensis, the black ironwood, [4] is an African tree species in the olive family Oleaceae. It is widespread in sub-Saharan Africa: from the east in Somalia, Ethiopia and Sudan, south to the tip of South Africa, and west to Cameroon, Sierra Leone and the islands of the Gulf of Guinea, as well as Madagascar and the Comoros. [2]