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Chile could be home to world's oldest tree, study suggests

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SANTIAGO, (Reuters) A lush green forest in southern Chile might be home to the world's oldest tree after a new study found that an ancient alerce tree known as "great grandfathe­r" could be more than 5,000 years old.

Scientists were not able to determine an exact age based on tree rings because of the tree's massive trunk. Normally, a 1 meter (1.09 yards) cylinder of wood is extracted to count tree rings, but the great grandfathe­r's trunk has a diameter of 4 meters.

Jonathan Barichivic­h, the scientist who led the study, said the sample they extracted and other dating methods suggest the tree is up to 5,484 years old.

"This method tells us that 80% of all possible growth trajectori­es give us an age of this living tree greater than 5,000 years," Barichivic­h said. "There is only a 20% chance that the tree is younger."

The estimated age would beat the current record-holder, a 4,853 year old bristlecon­e pine tree in California, by more than half a millennium.

"If one compares it with the trees already dated where we count all the rings, it would make it one of the oldest living trees on the planet," Barichivic­h said.

While it survived numerous eras of human civilizati­on, Barichivic­h is concerned about the tree's prominence in the Alerce Costero National Park. Visitors often leave the observatio­n platform, step on the tree's roots and even take pieces of its bark, he said.

He said that similar trees in the United States have their location hidden to prevent similar damage.

Barichivic­h said he hoped people could "think for a fraction of a second about what it means to live 5,000 years," and put their lives and the climate crisis into perspectiv­e.

 ?? Jonathan Barichivic­h/Handout via REUTERS ?? An Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoid­es) is pictured in a forest at the Alerce Costero National Park in Los Rios, Chile, in this undated photograph.
Jonathan Barichivic­h/Handout via REUTERS An Alerce (Fitzroya cupressoid­es) is pictured in a forest at the Alerce Costero National Park in Los Rios, Chile, in this undated photograph.

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