They are sugar maple, Norway maple, silver maple, sweet maple.
edible for humans, as they contain compounds that can be toxic if consumed in large quantities. Ingesting sugar maple leaves can cause digestive issues and irritation. It's best to admire sugar maple leaves for their beauty in nature rather than consuming them.
opposite
A sugar maple leaf is from a dicot plant. Dicots are characterized by having leaves with branched veins, whereas monocots have leaves with parallel veins.
branch leaves and roots
The type of maple leaf that is on the Canadian penny is a Sugar Maple leaf. While this is commonly excepted, it is not a maple at all. Maple leaves grow in paired opposite attachment along the stem, the penny has a two leaves attached individually. While the original artist may have thought it was a maple it is probably a London Plane Tree. I am referencing my university botany instructor on this one, but I verified this with phylotaxic diagrams.
Type your answer here... Maple syrup
Yes, "Sugar Maple Tree" is a proper noun because it refers to a specific type of tree - the sugar maple tree. It is capitalized to indicate that it is a specific species of tree within the maple family.
The leaves are not in it but the sap is.
The leaf on the Canadian flag is a maple leaf; specifically, a sugar maple leaf.
A sugar maple is a large deciduous tree with a broad, rounded crown. Its leaves are palmately lobed with five distinct lobes and turn vibrant shades of yellow, orange, and red in the fall. The bark of a sugar maple is gray and furrowed with long, vertical ridges.
a sugar maple does not