President (tree)

The President is a giant sequoia located in the Giant Forest of Sequoia National Park in the United States, east of Visalia, California. It is not the tallest giant sequoia tree in the world with a height of about 247 feet (75 m), nor the widest at about 27 feet (8.2 m) in diameter at the base, but it is the third-largest tree in the world, measured by volume of trunk, and the oldest-known living sequoia, about 3,200 years old.[1] As of 2012, the volume of its trunk measured at about 45,000 cubic feet (1,300 m3), with an additional 9,000 cubic feet (250 m3) of branches.[2]

The President Tree

The tree was named after President Warren G. Harding in 1923.[3] Nearby trees include Chief Sequoyah, the 27th-largest giant sequoia in the world, and the Congress Group, two dense stands of medium-sized sequoias that represent the "House" and "Senate".

Description

The President features a dense crown with enormous branches reaching upward and outward. An especially prominent white branch is visible the western side of the tree's upper crown. A long, narrow burn scar is present on the north side of its trunk.

Dimensions

Meters Feet
Height above base[1] 75.3 247.0
Circumference at ground[4] 28.4 93.0
Diameter 1.5 m above base 7.1 23.1
Diameter 18 m (60') above base Hu3 5.2 16.9
Diameter 55 m (180') above base 3.55 11.6
Diameter of largest branch 2.43 8.0
Height of first large branch above the base 37.1 122.0
Estimated bole volume (m3.ft3)[4] 1,278.0 45,148.0
Estimated volume in branches (m3.ft3)[5] 254.9 9,000.0
gollark: If you're writing a thing you probably have a decent idea of the problem domain involved and what's going on, and just have to work out how to express that in code.
gollark: What I'm saying is that reading things and understanding them can be harder than writing them sometimes.
gollark: Yes. It's not unique to Haskell.
gollark: For example, if I was doing Haskell, I could write everything awfully in `IO` and make it very comprehensible to a C user, or I could write it in some crazy pointfree way which I don't understand 5 seconds after writing it.
gollark: e.g. you probably wouldn't just go for C, if you wanted to avoid being caught.

See also

References

  1. Quammen, David. "Giant Sequoias". National Geographic (December 2012).
  2. Cone, Tracie (December 2012). "After review, giant sequoia beats neighbor". Associated Press. Archived from the original on December 3, 2012. Retrieved 2 December 2012.
  3. "Giant redwood dedicated to memory of late president". National Lumber Bulletin. September 7, 1923. p. 13.
  4. "The Giant Sequoia -- Forest Masterpiece". Retrieved 2012-12-02.
  5. "Giant Sequoia Tree 'The President' Tops 'General Grant,' National Geographic Photographs The Forest". Huffington Post. 2012-12-01. Retrieved 2012-12-07.

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