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Norfolk Island pine
(redirected from Norfolk pines)

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Norfolk Island pine: see monkey-puzzle tree monkey-puzzle tree, evergreen tree (Araucaria araucana) native to Chile and widely cultivated elsewhere as an ornamental. The symmetrical branches have an unusual angularity and are completely covered by the stiff, overlapping leaves.
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Norfolk Island pine

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Norfolk Island pine (Araucaria excelsa).
(credit: Robert C. Hermes-The National Audubon Society Collection/Photo Researchers)
Evergreen timber and ornamental conifer (Araucaria excelsa, or A. heterophylla) of the family Araucariaceae, native to Norfolk Island in the South Pacific Ocean. In nature this pine grows to a height of 200 ft (60 m), with a trunk sometimes reaching 10 ft (3 m) in diameter. The wood of large trees is used in construction, furniture, and shipbuilding. The sapling stage is grown worldwide as a houseplant and as an outdoor ornamental in regions with a Mediterranean climate. The monkey puzzle tree is a relative.



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Small palms, oleanders and even Norfolk pines have done very well, with the palms and pines now being over 10 feet tall and still growing.
Between the two strips of building is what Popov calls a 'street', a pedestrian way which runs north-south through the site, widens in the middle to accommodate a couple of Norfolk pines, and makes provision for communal barbecues.
The lodge sits at about 1,700 feet next to a grove of Norfolk pines (planted in the early 1900s to catch fog drip and enhance the island's precious groundwater reserves).
 
 
 
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