Article 5ZNGZ Ancient cypress in Chile may be the world’s oldest tree, new study suggests

Ancient cypress in Chile may be the world’s oldest tree, new study suggests

by
John Bartlett in Santiago
from Environment | The Guardian on (#5ZNGZ)

The tree, in Chile's Alerce Costero national park, is known as the Great-Grandfather and could be more than 5,000 years old

Scientists in Chile believe that a conifer with a four-metre-thick trunk known as the Great-Grandfather could be the world's oldest living tree, beating the current record-holder by more than 600 years.

A new study carried out by Dr Jonathan Barichivich, a Chilean scientist at the Climate and Environmental Sciences Laboratory in Paris, suggests that the tree, a Patagonian cypress, also known as the alerce milenario, could be up to 5,484 years old.

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