no
Yes
There was barley anything but lands. The trees of New Jersey were very short in those times. They were about half the size of the trees we all see today.
Joyce Kilmer was a poet who was born in New Jersey and wrote poems about New Jersey. One of his most remembered poems is called 'Trees.' He was born Alfred Joyce Kilmer in New Brunswick, New Jersey on December 6, 1886.
true
There is no state beverages. Just birds, trees, motto's, and flowers.
There are state flowers, trees, mottos, and birds but there are no "liquids" that are "state liquids".
There are literally hundreds of examples of trees. Some examples of trees include pines, oaks, maples, locust, apple, and pear trees.
Actually, a few cold hardy varieties CAN grow in coastal areas of southeastern New York. There is a grouping of Needle Palms (Rhapidophyllym hystrix) thriving in the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens of New York City. Go see for yourself!
Oak and maple are examples of deciduous trees (trees that loose their leaves).
No. Some can't even survive in the summer. Palm trees need to live in warm climates like Florida all year round to survive. Even if palm trees live in New Jersey during the summer, they will probably die the first frost of mid-October.
I actually don't know so i'm asking you to comment down below what you think
Specifically in the Amazon in a year a forest the size of New Jersey gets cut down.