slgwv

slgwv club

Posted: 20 Nov 2014


Taken: 21 Sep 2014

4 favorites     9 comments    352 visits

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...

Scene In Scene In


Silver Surfers Silver Surfers


Tolerance Tolerance


I ♥ Nature I ♥ Nature


The Photo Cafe The Photo Cafe


Arizona Arizona


USA USA


See more...

Keywords

USA
Arizona
Sedona
hiking
hike
Brin's Mesa
juniper


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

352 visits


Survivor

Survivor
Very large and gnarly juniper off the Brin Mesa Trail, Sedona, Arizona, USA. Map location is approximate.
Translate into English

Andy Rodker, , , William Sutherland have particularly liked this photo


9 comments - The latest ones
 William Sutherland
William Sutherland club
Terrific shot!

Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
9 years ago.
 Pam J
Pam J club
These are heritage trees... as are Bristlecones.. a privilege to see them
9 years ago.
 slgwv
slgwv club
Thanks, everyone!
9 years ago.
 slgwv
slgwv club
Thanks!
9 years ago.
 Andy Rodker
Andy Rodker club
Just how old can these junipers get? I've heard some amazing claims for bristlecones!
Great shot, Steve!
Seen on 'Hill Walking ...'
6 years ago.
slgwv club has replied to Andy Rodker club
Thanks, Andy! Apparently junipers >1000 years old are well-documented. I'd guess this one is probably several centuries, but I don't have tree-ring data! (You can get tree-ring data by coring the tree with a hollow drill, which doesn't harm it. Usta be involved with some of that when I was in college.)

Bristlecones are not closely related--they're pines, most closely related to the scrubby piñon pines of the American west. But some bristlecones _are_ the oldest documented living things on the planet. I have some pix and should put together an album:
www.ipernity.com/doc/289859/39691916/in/album/453245?lc=1#comments
www.ipernity.com/doc/289859/39735058/in/album/852092?lc=1#comments
6 years ago.
Andy Rodker club has replied to slgwv club
Yes, an album would be good!
By the way I've heard claims for a ground level pine tree in Tasmania that some of which are thought to be 10,000 years old or more. From memory, and it is a long time since I saw a documentary on it, it spreads along the ground very slowly dying and forming new shoots as it goes and is thought to be effectively the same organism rather than the dying and re-birth of most other trees. I will try and find out more on it and let you know...
6 years ago. Edited 6 years ago.
slgwv club has replied to Andy Rodker club
Yes, if you count clonal colonies you can get much higher ages (cf. the aspen grove)!
6 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.