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I need help identifying this tree... Anonymous
The trunk pictured here. The grayish, smooth bark peels off into thinnish, but not papery pieces, revealing smooth white wood beneath. I'll try get a picture of the leaves later, to poast.
>> BitterAnon !!WJLRQ1cwCyZ
>>244572
I don't know nothin bout no trees but that is probably a birch of some sort.
>> Anonymous
London Plane
>> Anonymous
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Trunk looks like this, no?

Seems like a platanus to me.
>> Anonymous
>>244587
>>244588
OP here. Thanks guise. It' definitely a platanus. Probably London Plane. Always wondered because I see them outside this place, which is a library. Also everywhere. The ones outside the library are huge, bigger than the one pictured, and lumpy, and beautiful and old-looking and tall. Thanks very much!
>> Anonymous
They had a bunch of them on the grounds where I went to grade school. I guess I've known how to identify that tree for 18 years, now.
>> Anonymous
>>244588Seems like a platanus to me.
>>plantanus
>>plant anus

lol'd
>> Anonymous
>>244593
Wow. Almost as long as I've been alive.
I wonder, why do they get those weird bumps on them? It's fascinating, I think it helps give the trees outside the library a character, along with their size.
>> Anonymous
>>244595
Plant anus....My first thought on reading that: Tree farts.
"What's loud, creaky, and smells like dirt?"
>> Anonymous
>>244596

weird bumps on a tree usually means bugs under the bark, I think.
>> Anonymous
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>>244596
OP again. Knobs like this, by the way.
>> the tree shar
it's probably a birch or sycamore
>> Anonymous
>>244600
It's a sycamore (American, as opposed to sycamore maple or sycamore fig.) :)
>> Anonymous
first one looks like a platanus tree for me

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platanus