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© CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Credit Elbert L. Little, Jr., U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pinus_strobus_range_map_1.png

Eastern White Pine Range Map



Eastern White Pine Range Map

Credit

Elbert L. Little, Jr., U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pinus_strobus_range_map_1.png

Copyright

© CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

From the album:

Eastern White Pine

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Larry Buskirk

Posted

:ChinScratch: Looks like "Two Weeks From Anywhere" didn't get counted on the map even though they're all over the place here. 

John Morris

Posted

1 hour ago, Larry Buskirk said:

:ChinScratch: Looks like "Two Weeks From Anywhere" didn't get counted on the map even though they're all over the place here. 

Well Larry, you are two weeks for everywhere, no one even knows your location exists, so it makes sense that even our world scientists missed your location.

I think the coverage map got it pretty close for ya though, you are in Bristol, just slightly north of that little sliver of green in Illinois butting up next to the lake. I'd say within a 20 miles of your location.

  • Haha 2
Larry Buskirk

Posted

29 minutes ago, John Morris said:

Well Larry, you are two weeks for everywhere, no one even knows your location exists, so it makes sense that even our world scientists missed your location.

I think the coverage map got it pretty close for ya though, you are in Bristol, just slightly north of that little sliver of green in Illinois butting up next to the lake. I'd say within a 20 miles of your location.

Looks more like about 40 or so miles to me, but then again, we've got plants and trees that some sites say don't "normally" grow within over 100 miles from us. :WonderScratch:

John Morris

Posted

1 hour ago, Larry Buskirk said:

Looks more like about 40 or so miles to me, but then again, we've got plants and trees that some sites say don't "normally" grow within over 100 miles from us. :WonderScratch:

I don't think it's an exact science Larry. I wonder as well if an area has to meet a certain percentage of population of a plant or tree to be considered populated?

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