Juniorsbook

What Trees Live Longest?

what trees live longest

What Trees Live Longest? The oldest trees in the world are the bristlecone pines. These twisted, gnarled trees live high in the White Mountains of California. They grow slowly – often less than one inch in diameter every 100 years! The oldest living bristlecone is Methuselah. This tree was already 2,600 years old when Christ was born. And today, at 4,600 years old, it still lives.

Scientists believe these ancient trees can live 5,000 years. You can see these trees in a section of the Inyo National Forest in California, where about 100 of them are more than 4,600 years old.

Trees listed by age and species includes trees for which a minimum age has been directly determined, either through counting or cross-referencing tree rings or through radiocarbon dating. Many of these trees may be even older than their listed ages, but the oldest wood in the tree has rotted away.

For some old trees, so much of the centre is missing that their age cannot be directly determined. Instead, estimates are made based on the tree’s size and presumed growth rate. Then included are the trees with these estimated ages. Last inclusion is of clonal colonies in which no individual tree trunks may be remarkably old but in which the organism as a whole is thought to be very old.

Content for this question contributed by Melissa Yonkers, resident of Rothbury, Grant Township, Oceana County, Michigan, USA
Exit mobile version