They were created in the beginning.
the sea, the air, trees, etc. Things that come naturally from 'earth'. Humans, they come from earth too lol
Turpentine is made by distilling resin from trees, primarily pine trees.
Fir and pine trees are easy to work with because they have clear rings and they grow quite old
A journal paper was published under the title of "Lightning protection for trees and related property" (R. Cripe, Journal of Arboriculture; Sept.24 2007) that notes Pine Trees are third most likely to be struck by lightning; after oak and elm. Pine trees are noted as being on average taller than other trees, having a direct water-table root system and their needles have a lower resistance (higher conductivity).
Wood comes from a tree. Trees are natural to the earth, therefore, they are an earth material.
Humans and pine trees both inhabit the planet Earth.
Pine trees
They come from pine trees, so wherever pine trees live. Most likely in colder climates.
umm... a pine tree?!DUHH!...lolidk
Yes. They are found in pine cones which come from pine trees. (see: http://www.answers.com/topic/pine-nut)
A pine cone comes from a pine tree which is a conifer. The word conifer means cone bearing. Grapes come from vines.
It is possible for brown pine trees to come back to health with proper care and conditions, but it depends on the extent of damage and the specific reasons for their decline.
Lots of different trees, such as pine, pulped and then glued together.
ALL pine trees are cone-bearing -that's where the pine-nuts come from. AND that is WHY they are classified as coniferous.(Coniferous means cone bearing.)
Pine trees can be found in various countries around the world, but they are particularly common in North America, Europe, and Asia. Each region may have different species of pine trees that are native to that area.
No, Pine Trees have pine needles, not leaves
Coniferous trees (spruce, pine, etc.) are called softwood, even though some have harder wood than deciduous trees (maple, oak, birch, etc.).