He seems to have an environmental bent : Many of his bombs have used exotic wood, including redwood, red cedar, yellow poplar, pine, maple, cottonwood, Douglas fir and hickory.
22.
Cove hardwood forests are typically found at the lower elevations along rivers and streams, and chiefly consist of yellow poplar, white oak, red oak, hemlock, and multiple other species.
23.
The leaves crunch underfoot and the yellow poplars and oaks, crimson red sourwoods and maples and bright orange sassafras are displaying their finery at the Bullington Horticultural and Learning Center.
24.
In the fall, the reflected light of the yellow poplars, rusty beeches and scarlet sumacs are so intense that they tint the water the same color children arrive at when they use too many crayons.
25.
Foods Eaten : Aster, Black-eyed Susan, Common Milkweed, Queen Anne's Lace, Dandelions, Bull Thistle, Goldenrod, Jewelweed, Devil's Beggartick, Joe-pye Weed, Climbing Bittersweet, Black Willow, Yellow Poplar, American Holly, Ragweed, Greater Bladderwort, Blueberry, Jimsonweed, Honeysuckle, Rose Mallow
26.
The Ragged Mountain Natural Area was established in 1997 and opened to the public in 1999 . It encompasses a reservoir for the city of Charlottesville and the surrounding watershed, forested primarily with oak and yellow poplar.
27.
Richard Meagher and his colleagues at the University of Georgia have been boosting the clean-up capacity of yellow poplars, tobacco and other crops by adding bacterial genes that convert deadly methyl mercury into a far less toxic form.
28.
A vast expanse of greenery at the end of which lies a grove of yellow poplar; a path that winds through a bit of landscape and intersects with others, dividing the terrain into triangular islands of successive new views.
29.
The tulip tree is sometimes referred to as " tulip poplar " or " yellow poplar ", and the wood simply as " poplar ", although " Liriodendron " is not closely related to the true poplars, but is more closely related to magnolia trees.
30.
The American tulip tree ( commonly called " Yellow Poplar " or " Tulip Poplar " ), though no relation to true poplars ) is a very common hardwood tree in the American Southeast and Midwest, especially around me in North Carolina, and it is actually from the magnolia family.