This is a rachis with bipinnate leaves from a honey locust tree. There are eighteen leafy off-shoots from the main rachis, arranged symmetrically with nine on each side. The specimen is medium brown with a golden tint and measures approximately 27 cm x 23 cm. This specimen description was written remotely based on images as part of Amber Kreiensieck's internship in Fall 2021. Collage includes EO 400545, 400546, 400547, 400548, 400549, 400550, 400551, 400552, 400553, 400554, 400555, 400556, 400557, 400558, 400559, and 400560,
- Catalog Number:
- 400546 -DSP
- Object/Specimen Description:
- Specimen Count:
- 1
- Precise Locality:
Capitol Hill residential area
- Locality:
- US Mid Atlantic (PA, NJ, MD, DE, DC, VA, WV)
- Collecting Locality:
- North America, United States, District of Columbia
- Special Instructions:
- Only available digitally
- Upper Level Taxonomy:
- Plantae, Equisetopsida, Magnoliidae, Rosanae, Fabales, Fabaceae
- Location:
- Collection Wall
Dicots begin their lives as seeds nourished by two seed leaves (cotyledons). The leaves provide nutrients to the developing seed until it grows its first real leaves that can make food by photosynthesizing. Most flowering plants are dicots, which includes many of the foods humans enjoy: grapes, squash, soybeans, strawberries, tomatoes, potatoes, peanuts, etc. You can tell a dicot by its characteristic branching leaf veins. Not only do dicots feed us, they also cloth us; cotton, linen, and hemp are dicots. Because dicots and conifers are the only plants able to form wood, they are central to our building industry. Wood is extra plant tissue for transporting water and nutrients (vascular tissue). It forms when cells specialized for growth (meristems) continue to divide. The result is that the tree grows, adding to its width and height. Maples, oaks, and hickories, all sources of wood, are dicots.