Paper is typically made from the pulp of wood, which comes from the inner layer of the tree called the xylem. The xylem is ground up and processed to create the fibers used in paper production.
Leaves are the part of the tree that makes food through the process of photosynthesis. They contain chlorophyll, a green pigment that captures sunlight to convert water and carbon dioxide into glucose, which is the tree's food source.
The innermost part of a tree trunk, known as the heartwood, is typically the oldest part of the tree. It is formed from older layers of sapwood that have become inactive.
The majority of the matter that makes up the body of a tree as it grows comes from carbon dioxide in the air, which is absorbed by the tree during photosynthesis.
Twig.
wood pulp
What tree is in paper?
any kind of tree
wood
It doesn't really matter softwood makes soft paper and hardwood makes normal paper
The Bark
the average tree makes around 40,000 sheets of paper
The green part genius.
yea ====== yes there are dead cells in paper because it was part of a tree before
A typical ream of paper, which contains 500 sheets, is estimated to come from about 1/6 of a tree, depending on the type of tree and the size of the paper. This translates to roughly 15-20% of a tree for the production of one ream of paper. However, these figures can vary based on factors such as tree species and paper production methods.
the leaves
Paper was first made out of a mulberry tree. Ts'ai Lun broke the part of the tree and he broke into small fibers. Later they were turned into a sheet of paper by pounding the fibers.
a tree takes chemicals in the air and makes it breathable again, and can provide shelter for animals, and wood, paper and more for humans