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Scientists discover a giant thousand-year-old tree called Tessmannia princeps, a new species that reaches 131 feed high and 3 ...
From the first ever Stanford Tree in 1975 to the current Tree #45, the mascot has been a campus fashion icon with quirky elements that unabashedly stand alone.
Wytheville Community College (WCC) is getting a fresh look this summer with the planting of 160 new green giant arborvitae ...
Oak trees change their fine roots and "energize" soil microbes by supplying them with a cocktail of small organic compounds, ...
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The Daily Galaxy on MSNScientists Unearth 3,000-Year-Old Giant Trees in Tanzania – A New Species FoundIn a groundbreaking discovery, botanists have identified a towering, ancient species of tree in Tanzania’s Udzungwa Mountains ...
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Why Are Giant, Ancient Tropical Trees Dying? - MSNLearning what kills giant trees is a question of increasing urgency. In 2022, a Nature study conducted in Australia suggested that the death rates of tropical trees there have doubled since the 1980s.
Who is Oliver Tree? Even his fans haven't really known the answer, as the wacky pop music star has presented himself in a mysterious, Andy Kaufman-like way throughout his career, conjuring various ...
A giant stuffed sloth that lived in a tree off Interstate 5 (I-5) is now on solid terrain near Lake Samish.
Aging giant sequoia trees are growing faster than ever, with some of the oldest and tallest trees producing more wood, on average, in old age than they did when they were younger. (Read about ...
Across northcentral Wisconsin, leaves have begun to change from green into red, orange, yellow, and brown earlier than in previous years.
Crews recently planted 30,000 giant sequoia seedlings in the western Sierra, as part of an ongoing effort to restore groves devastated by wildfire.
Why Are Giant, Ancient Tropical Trees Dying? Scientists from an international project are racing to figure out what kills these anchors of their ecosystems—before it’s too late to save them ...
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