Tim, 

I imagine it is possible. There are a few 8-foot tall humans. But something 
tells me that Mr. Hawks had just come out of the Charlemont Inn where he had 
enthusiastically imbibed for a long period of time and ran into a reporter from 
the Greenfield Gazette who was wearing a naive, trusting look. The rest is 
history. 


Bob 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Timothy Zelazo" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Saturday, November 14, 2009 4:00:18 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] A Large Tree article in 1849 


ENTS: 

While I was doing some historic research on the cultural history of the Natural 
Bridge State Park, located in North Adams Massachusetts, I found an interesting 
article in the Weekly Transcript, North Adams, Mass., Thursday, July 12, 1849. 

A Large Tree. --- Mr. D. E. Hawks, of Charlemont, cut a Pine tree a short time 
since, of the following dimensions. It was 7 feet through 10 feet from the 
stump, and 5 feet through 50 feet from the stump. Twenty-two logs were taken 
from the tree, the average length of which were 12 feet. Fourteen feet of the 
tree were spoiled in falling. The extreme length of the tree from the stump to 
the top twigs was 300 feet! ---- Greenfield Gazette. 


I asked Robert Campanile if he thought this was possible and here is the 
response he gave me. 



TREE GENETICS 

There can be enormous variation among the different individuals of any one 
species and this is partly genetic. For instance, grain and figure may vary, 
just like human fingerprints. There may be no specific benefit from such 
variation. But if there is no great natural selective pressure not to vary, 
then variations will creep in. Genomes are not commandments, which say exactly 
what to do come what may. Genes present options. They operate in dialogue with 
the environment. So the same tree, grown under different circumstances, could 
grow in very different ways, and the effects of the different circumstances are 
reflected in the timber, height, width, etc. The growing timber responds to the 
stresses and strains and pressures just as the bone of mammals may do. 

In forests, trees grow straight and tall, anxious for the light. That and the 
resources needed to accomplish that growth will be factors in determining the 
height and shape of the tree needed to get the light. Conifers are generally 
light lovers. To this end they have a trick – many can grow very tall very 
quickly. This is why in the far north they tend to be very tall and thin – the 
sun is always low in the sky and so they get most of their light from the side. 
The environment dictates the conditions and the challenge, and genes can 
sometimes help meet that challenge with the variance in growth and natural 
processes that the genetic code allows. 



Tim 





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