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sequoia |
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sequoiaEither of two species of conifer tree belonging to the redwood family, native to the western USA. The redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) is a long-living timber tree, and one specimen, the Howard Libbey Redwood, is the world's tallest tree at 110 m/361 ft, with a trunk circumference of 13.4 m/44 ft. The giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) reaches up to 30 m/100 ft in circumference at the base of the trunk, and grows almost as tall as the redwood. It is also (except for the bristlecone pine) the oldest living tree, some specimens being estimated at over 3,500 years of age. (Family Taxodiaceae.)
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Both of the green giants are coast redwoods, or Sequoia sempervirens. Only the champion giant sequoia, coast redwood, western redcedar, and Sitka spruce have a larger circumference. The seeds for Shulman's plan: His own coast redwood grotto, which he planted 47 years ago behind his glass-sided house, one of the first to sport the sleek Modern style. |
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