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Outside my window in Building 2N, I can watch the late afternoon light of the early autumn as it illuminates the Sweetgum trees (Liquidambar styraciflua). These tall trees, easily identified by their star-shaped leaves and their spiky hanging seed pods, are prominent throughout campus. Sweetgums are of the family Hamamelidaceae, which also contains Red Gum, White Gum, Star-leaved Gum, Alligator Tree, Blisted, and Satin Walnut. All of the trees of this family produce a sweet-scented "gum," which has commercial applications in salves, soaps, adhesives and tobacco flavoring; as October sets in, you can smell this scent as the leaves turn their warm crimson colors and fall.
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