Your search found 20 image(s) of leaves that are trifoliolate and palmately compound.
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Tall Blue Wild Indigo,
Baptisia australis
Leaflets 4-6 (-9) cm long, mostly > 12mm wide; leaflets not oriented in a vertical plane, per Weakley's Flora (2023).
Eastern Prairie Blue Wild Indigo,
Baptisia aberrans
Leaflets mostly oriented in a vertical plane (so viewed from above, the plant almost invisible), per Weakley's Flora (2023).
Carolina Wild Indigo,
Baptisia cinerea
Pubescent perennials with coriaceous trifoliate leaves & obovate leaflets, per Wild Flowers of NC, 2nd edition (Justice, Bell, & Lindsey, 2005).
Creamy Wild Indigo,
Baptisia bracteata
Leaves entire, palmately trifoliolate. Leaflets oblanceolate, to 1.5" long, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Gopherweed,
Baptisia lanceolata var. lanceolata
Flowers about 1" long, borne in leaf axils or in short terminal racemes, per Atlantic Coastal Plain Wildflowers (Nelson, 2006).
Horsefly Weed,
Baptisia tinctoria
Small obovate leaflets tapered at the base and nearly sessile, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Narrow-pod White Wild Indigo,
Baptisia albescens
Leaves 3-foliolate; petioles 5-10(20)mm long, per Weakley's Flora.
Thick-pod White Wild Indigo,
Baptisia alba
Leaflets up to about 3" long and often have a milky bloom on upper surface, per Atlantic Coastal Plain Wildflowers (Nelson, 2006).
Aaron's Rod,
Thermopsis villosa
Leaves have conspicuous ovate stipules, 2" long, with clasping basal lobes, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Appalachian Golden-banner,
Thermopsis mollis
Leaves have narrow stipules that do not clasp the stem, per Wildflowers of Tennessee, the Ohio Valley, and the Southern Appalachians (Horn, Cathcart, Hemmerly, & Duhl, 2005).
Ashleaf Golden-banner,
Thermopsis fraxinifolia
Leaves have narrow stipules that do not clasp the stem, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Rabbitfoot Clover,
Trifolium arvense
Leaflets are very narrowly oblanceolate, not more than 3/4" long, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Red Clover,
Trifolium pratense
Lanceolate to elliptical leaflets, each with a prominent pale green "V", per Wildflowers of Tennessee, the Ohio Valley, and the Southern Appalachians (Horn, Cathcart, Hemmerly, & Duhl, 2005).
White Clover,
Trifolium repens
Leaflets elliptic to obovate, per Wildflowers of Tennessee (Carman, 2005).
Alsike Clover,
Trifolium hybridum
Stems are ascending and bear both flowers and leaves, per Wildflowers of Tennessee (Carman, 2005).
Buffalo Clover,
Trifolium reflexum
Leaflets 1-2.8x as long as wide; stems erect or ascending, per Weakley's Flora.
Japanese-clover,
Kummerowia striata
The leaflets of Kummerowia have striate, parallel lateral veins, per Weakley's Flora.
Japanese-clover,
Kummerowia striata
Leaflets inconspicuously appressed-ciliate, not emarginate, per Weakley's Flora (2012).
Wafer-ash,
Ptelea trifoliata
Sources disagree as to whether the leaves are pinnately compound or palmately compound...
Wafer-ash,
Ptelea trifoliata
Terminal leaflet sessile, thus different from Poison Ivy and Poison Oak, per Trees of the Southeastern United States (Duncan & Duncan, 1988).