coniferous forest
Granite is an example of an igneous rock that cooled slowly underground and contains mostly quartz and potassium feldspar.
Epping Forest contains a variety of trees, including beech, oak, hornbeam, birch, and sweet chestnut. There are also some areas of pine plantation within the forest.
The forests where New Forest ponies live are known simply as the New Forest. It is a designated national park and common land in the county of Hampshire in southern England. The ponies roam freely within the forest area.
The vadose zone, also known as the unsaturated zone, contains mostly pockets of air. This zone is located above the water table and is where water can percolate through the soil and rock particles.
Ultramafic igneous rocks are comprised mostly of olivine and pyroxene. Examples include peridotite (pegmatic and porphyritic) and komatite.
You would be in a forest
Laos mostly contains tropical rain forest.
No, because the tundra is a biome where no trees grow. Evergreens grow in the Boreal/Coniferous Forest.
Boreal Forest biome
An evergreen forest is a forest consisting entirely or mainly of evergreen trees that retain green foliage all year round. Such forests reign the tropics primarily as broadleaf evergreens, and in temperate and boreal latitudes primarily as coniferous evergreens.
In some kind of shelter like a snow den, a cave, or in a forest of evergreens.
A deciduous forest contains mostly broad-leafed trees-- trees that shed their leaves every year. They are contrasted with evergreens like pine that are often conifers (cone bearing) and that have sharp, spindly dark green 'leaves' that survive throughout the year and last for several years. Examples are the forested areas throughout New England and elsewhere that have sometimes spectacular fall 'foliage', when the leaves lose their green color prior to falling.
I would assume that Canada is mostly covered in evergreens, so the biome would be taiga. Also, in the more northerly latitudes one would expect the biome to be tundra.
There are lots of differences, but the main one is that Oak mostly are deciduous and Pines are evergreens.
In 1989' a Nation that is mostly covered in dense forest?
Forest
Loraine L. Kumlien has written: 'Hill's book of evergreens' -- subject(s): Evergreens 'The friendly evergreens' -- subject(s): Evergreens