
Empires Rose and Fell, but This California Tree Outlasted Them All
Why the Great Basin bristlecone pine is the ultimate survivor.
-
CategoryExperiences, Hidden Gems, Outdoor Adventure, Sights + Stays, Sustainability
In Eastern California, in an area known as White Mountain, a tree species called the Great Basin bristlecone pine, or Pinus longaeva, has grown continuously for an astounding 4,500 years. While many California trees, like the juniper, oak and sequoia can live for a thousand years, the slow-growing bristlecone pine has an unlimited life expectancy.
According to a story about the tree’s history in the New Yorker, “Most seedlings die within a year; the mortality rate is more than 99%. The survivors are sometimes seen growing in the shadow of a fallen tree. The landscape of the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest, as this area of the White Mountains is called, is littered with fragments of dead trees—trunks, limbs, roots, and smaller chunks. Pinus longaeva grows exclusively in subalpine regions of the Great Basin, which stretches from the eastern slopes of the Sierra Nevada to the Wasatch Range, in Utah. Conditions are generally too arid for the dead wood to rot; instead, it erodes, sanded down like rock. The remnants may harbor nutrients and fungi that help new trees grow. Bristlecones rise from the bones of their ancestors—a city within a cemetery.”
Read more here about generations of researchers who have studied the bristlecone, and why it will likely outlast us all.
Remembering Los Angeles-Born Director John Singleton
He made his debut at 24 with Boyz N the Hood.
Billie Eilish Collaborator FINNEAS Debuts New Track
“Angel” is the third single by the multi-instrumentalist, and more are on the way.
Stanford University Is Working on an Immunity Test for Those Already Infected by COVID-19
A homegrown California endeavor in the making.