Pine trees do well on dry sites because of their tap root (a root that goes straight down, most tree roots just spread laterally).
Ash Balsa Ebony
Acorn is the seed of an oak tree and yes an oak is a hardwood. did you know that it takes a oak tree over 50 years to be able to produce acorns.
No, it's a hardwood.
Hardwood.
A white oak tree is indeed a hardwood it is the hardest wood on of hardwoods if you try and bang you head on it it might hurt just a little bit
A tree is usually a hardwood if it is a deciduous, ie. if it has broad leaves. Hardwoods also have a slower rate of growth, meaning the grain is much denser. A good example of this would be to compare the grain density of an oak tree to that of a pine. The oak will have maybe four growth rings in the space where the pine has one.
An oak tree is 6 times as old as a pine tree and an elm tree is 6 years younger than the oak tree. In 3 years, the age of the elm will be 3 times the age of the pine. How old is the oak tree now?
Yes, of course pine trees are real. That's where pine needles and pine cones come from.
Trivially no, because there's no such thing as a "pine oak tree". Pines and oaks are different kinds of trees.
All things being equal, the Oak.
The main differences between pine and oak wood are all based on pine being a softwood and oak being a hardwood. Oak furniture is heavier and more expensive than pine, but is very durable and can last for the entire life of the consumer.
Hardwoods are broad leaf trees which commonly include Oak, Ash, Beech, and Walnut. Softwoods are the timber from conifers such as pine and redwood. As the Fig tree has broad leaves it would be classed as a hardwood. From Realoakfloors