Bob,

Image #1 - Striped Maple - The oldest we have found is 69 years old from the 
Great Smokies - a core or ring count would be worthwhile for this tree.  Surely 
there are specimens older than 69 years - Maybe this one. Certainly coring the 
tree would not harm it.

Image #4 - Bigtooth Aspen - Bob, how do you know what the lifespan of a 
Bigtooth Aspen really is?  Any population will loose members over time, and 
this may be happening in this stand, but I am not sure how that directly 
relates to the end of lifespan for the tree species or stand.  Again this is a 
species for which we have no organized data (actually I have not found any good 
numbers a all.)  The oldest in the Eastern old-List for the species is just 
113, and I am sure some of these are older than that - but we just don't have 
good numbers for the species.

Image #5:  Bob do you have a compilation of the results of your coring in the 
early 1990's?  Can you get one?  If so how about posting the information, along 
with notations on whether the tree is still alive if you know.  Again our data 
for the species is pitiful.  The oldest I have compiled is a relatively young 
141 from the Smokies by Blozan and Riddle.  I know that is no where close to 
the oldest for the species.  But so many trees are cored and the data is never 
available for anyone else to see.  That is why I created the ENTS Maximum Age 
list, to supplement official compilations.

I will add this post to the Special Places Category as well as the 
Massachusetts Location.

Ed



"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. 
It is the source of all true art and all science." - Albert Einstein

  Image#1-TanyaRolandOnStripedMaple.jpg: This image conveys a message. Yes, the 
downed tree that Roland Blaich and his daughter Tanya are sitting on is a 
striped maple. Striped maple? Impossible, you say! Not at all. I visited this 
very tree for years and watched it get larger and larger. But alas, it went 
down. It now returns its nutrients to the earth that so faithfully nourished 
it. 


  Image#4-BigtoothAspen.jpg:  Another stretch near the brook has a stand of 
impressive bigtooth aspens that are now at the far end of their life spans. One 
on the other side of the brook may soon become the height champion.

  Image#5-TanyaAndWhiteAsh:  In the early 1990s, we cored the Dunbar Ash, and 
at the time, we counted 258 rings at core height. Today this old gent is at 
least 275 years young. 

  Image#7-OldYellowBirch.jpg: Roots of this ancient yellow birch engulf the 
rock on which it seeded maybe 300 years ago. "Rock-eating" birches are a common 
sight in the Dunbar forest. A Tolkien-like environment of moss and fern-covered 
boulders, tangled roots, twisting trunks and limbs, many species of herbs, and 
a canopy high above create that magic forest elixir that we commonly associate 
with old growth forests.
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