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Published 2014
The common wild hazel of Britain, most of Europe, and SW Asia is Corylus avellana. It is a low, shrubby tree, up to 6 m (20') tall, which often forms part of a hedgerow. Its small nuts with their hard, brown shells are borne in clusters of one to four, within a husk whose fancied resemblance to a helmet accounts for the name Corylus, from the Greek korys (helmet). ‘Hazel’ itself comes from the Anglo-Saxon haesil (headdress).
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