I got em' here too. saw 1 this morning (8/21/09) and one yesterday about 20 miles apart. No pine trees in sight at either location. Both instances were identical and approx 20 miles apart 5 and 15 miles north and northwest of Phila.
Cinder cone volcanoes are small with mildly explosive eruptions.
sounds like it may be a cycad cone, try googling "encephalartos cone" on goole images for confirmation
it is a cc cinder cone
a cinder cone volcanoe looks like a ant hill
A small pile of pyroclastic materials is known as a volcanic cone or a cinder cone. These form from the accumulation of fragmented volcanic rock, ash, and cinders around a volcanic vent.
Spruce, pine, fir, redwoods and junipers are all cone-bearing. Most conifers will produce cones, which can also be known as gymnosperms.
A Juniper berry is the female seed cone produced by the various species of Junipers. It is not a true berry but a cone with unusually fleshy and merged scales, which give it a berry-like appearance.
a ice cream cone
It depends on what the cone looks like.
It depends on what the cone looks like.
I had a golden retriever who ate a pine cone and ended up in surgery. It lodged in his small intestines and began tearing his intestines. It could have killed him.
pine treesCone bearing plants are called conifers. Some common examples of conifers are cedars, spruces, yews, pines, redwoods, cypresses, firs, and junipers.
From a distance a cone looks like an isosceles triangle.
Cinder cone volcanoes are small with mildly explosive eruptions.
Coniferous plants produce seeds in cones instead of fruits, they include Pines, ceders, firs, spruce, Junipers and Yews, plus a few others,
it looks like a cone
Eating a red snow cone does not cause red in bowel movements. This dye is absorbed into the system first.