Pine trees of course!
Ash Trees Aspen Trees Pine Trees
Ash Trees Aspen Trees Pine Trees
Oak Ash Beech Sycamore Scots Pine
Yes, ash trees are commonly found with oak trees in some forests. In northern Texas for example, it is common to find Green Ash, Texas Ash and White Ash growing near Red oak, Shumard Oak, Post Oak and Burr Oak.
Spruce, pine, aspen, birch, oak, ash, beech, and maple trees
Red oak, white oak, white pine, hemlock, fir, spruce, hickory, walnut, chestnut, aspen, beech, poplar, ash, wild cherry, dogwood, cedar, apple.
pine
The trees that grow in a humid continental region are cottonwood, ash, cherry, weeping willow, birch. Also have trees like pitch pine, oak, hickory, and maple.
Oak, Ash, Elm, Horse Chestnut, Beech, Sycamore, Cedar, Lime, Pine.
Evergreen trees keep their leaves in winter. These are pine trees, fir trees, redwoods, spruces, and the like. Also two kinds of oak trees keep their leaves in winter, live oaks and water oaks. Some species closely related to the oaks also do, camellias, azaleas, and rhododendron.
An Aspen tree can grow as tall as 131 feet and can live up to 150 years above the ground. The wood from the Aspen tree can be made into matches and paper because of it's low flammability.
Trees generally. If you are asking where hardwoods grow, that answer is a bit broader. Hardwoods grow from the middle southern portion of the southern hemisphere to the middle northern portion of the northern hemisphere. Generally speaking, any tree with leaves produces hardwood (ash, oak, balsa), opposed to needle bearing trees that produce softwoods (i.e. pine, for, cedar).