THE REDWOODS
THREE THOUSAND YEARS and more of recorded history
have come and gone. In far Cathay an empire grew and an ancient
civilization developed that still persists. Saul, David, and Solomon
established a kingdom and developed a nation out of which came
Christianity. Babylon, Greece, and Rome ruled the world and lost their
sway. Europe and America developed a modern civilization. Throughout the
long periods of time in which these events have taken place, the
Redwoods of California have continued to live and grow. Trees three to
four thousand years old, trees taller than a city block is long, trees
each large enough to build forty or fifty houses, trees large enough for
roadways to pass through them, have continued to live through all these
centuries.
The ancestry of these trees goes back through
millions of years, and their unbroken line of descent connects the
present with the age of reptiles. Their ancestors were the companions of
the dinosaurs. They flourished in Asia for many centuries before they
migrated to the Western Hemisphere. They constitute the connecting link
between the dead past and the living present, between the ancient East
and the modern West.
The Redwoods are the tallest, the largest, the
oldest, and the most famous trees of the world. They are included
invariably in any list of natural wonders. Their size, age, beauty, and
magnificent surroundings, all contribute to give them world-wide
interest.
In writing of the Coast Redwoods, Dr. W. L. Jepson,
Professor of Botany in the University of California, states: "The
scientific interest of the Redwood is undoubtedly greater than that of
any other tree of the cone-bearing class. It has most wonderful
vitality; it has almost complete immunity from disease; its regenerative
power is very remarkable; and it has a most astonishing resistance to
fire. Lastly, its migrations over the Northern Hemisphere since the
period of our record of its first appearance on earth, give it an
unusual and romantic interest." Of Redwoods in general he says, further:
"Of the many species which once constituted the Redwood genus, some
thirty or more have been described from fossil material, and of these
only two have survived to the present time. What an adventurous journey,
as they took their part in vast plant migrations with the changing
continents!"
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THE WAWONA OR TUNNEL TREE, YOSEMITE
NATIONAL PARK, WITH GALEN CLARK, DISCOVERER OF MARIPOSA GROVE
Courtesy of Julius Boysen
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