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The pecan is a species of hickory cultivated for its sweet, high-quality, thin-shelled nuts. It is native to the Mississippi River Valley, but it is widely planted elsewhere. The bitternut hickory is the most widespread hickory in eastern North America. Its nuts are too bitter-tasting for people to eat. The shagbark hickory has shaggy bark that peels off in long, curved strips. Its sweet, edible nuts once served as a basic food for many American Indian tribes. Shagbark hickory wood is used to make high-quality charcoal. The mockernut hickory is the most common hickory species in the southern part of the United States. It provides one of the best woods for manufacturing purposes. The pignut hickory usually yields the heaviest commercial hickory wood. Scientific Classification. Hickories belong to the walnut family, Juglandaceae. The scientific name for the pecan is Carya illinoensis; the bitternut hickory, C. cordiformis; the shagbark, C. ovata; the mockernut, C. tomentosa; and the pignut, C. glabra. |
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