Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Philosophy Wire: Trees 3,000 years old, humans, immortality…

<br />PERMITTED USE: This image may be downloaded or is otherwise provided at no charge for one-time use for coverage or promotion of National Geographic magazine dated December 2012 and exclusively in conjunction thereof.  No copying, distribution or archiving permitted.  Sublicensing, sale or resale is prohibited. <br /><br />REQUIRED CREDIT AND CAPTION: All image uses must bear the copyright notice and be properly credited to the relevant photographer, as shown in this metadata, and must be accompanied by a caption, which makes reference to NGM.  Any uses in which the image appears without proper copyright notice, photographer credit and a caption referencing NGM are subject to paid licensing. <br /><br />You MUST follow these requirements if using the images: <br />1. Include mandatory photo credit with each image © Michael Nichols/National Geographic <br />2. Show the December cover of National Geographic somewhere in the post (credit: National Geographic) <br />3. Provide a prominent link to: http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2012/12/sequoias/nichols-photography 4. Mention that the images are "from the December issue of National Geographic magazine.”<br />Giant sequoias live at high elevations, enduring cold, heavy snows, lightning strikes—and growing bulky and strong, though not so tall as coast redwoods. This individual, the President, is the second most massive tree known on Earth.Philosophy Wire by Spiros Kakos [2012-12-04]: Deep in the Sierra Nevada The President, a 54,000-cubic-foot gargantuan tree at the height of a skyscraper in the Sequoia National Park, lies in silence after it has just been declared the second largest living organism on Earth. After 3,240 years, the giant sequoia is still growing wider at a consistent rate... [source: web news, web news 2] I do not know about you, but I get the weird feeling that I am not envy of this longevity of that tree… Or maybe I do? I cannot decide which one of the two, if true, is more exciting…

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