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Callitropsis nootkatensis 'Pendula Glauca' Smithsonian Gardens Hardiness -30 - 10 F Ethnobotanical Uses Native Northwest Coastal people of the US and Canada used this tree to make everything from bows ...
The yellow-cedar is the book's star. Found along the Pacific Coast from California to Alaska, Callitropsis nootkatensis goes also by the name "yellow cypress" and is a relative of the giant sequoia.
The species is Callitropsis nootkatensis. Some people call it the Alaska cedar. Others call it the yellow cypress, or the Nootka cypress, named after Nootka Sound along Vancouver Island, where it ...
In particular, the FWS decided not to list the yellow-cedar (Callitropsis nootkatensis), a slow-growing but commercially in-demand tree that occurs from southern Alaska to northern California.
Ying Zeng, Tiehan Zhao, Allison R. Kermode, A Conifer ABI3-Interacting Protein Plays Important Roles during Key Transitions of the Plant Life Cycle, Plant Physiology, Vol. 161, No. 1 (January 2013), ...
Native Northwest Coastal people of the US and Canada used this tree to make everything from bows to bowls, and even ceremonial masks. The inner bark was used to make cloth and baskets. Provenance From ...
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