The mystery continues.Editor: The jury is still out on the age of the great osage-orange at the home of Patrick Henry, despite the intriguing article (Summer 2003) by Nancy Ross Hugo and the two increment cores taken by dendrochronologist Carolyn Copenheaver. Via a combination of leg-end, inordinate extrapolation (mathematics, algorithm) extrapolation - A mathematical procedure which estimates values of a function for certain desired inputs given values for known inputs. If the desired input is outside the range of the known values this is called extrapolation, if it is inside then of data, and wishful thinking wishful thinking Psychology Dereitic thought that a thing or event should have a specified outcome , the tree is proclaimed to be 300 years old. Not bloody likely. I have lived among acres of this species since 1978. The trees frequently have quite variable ring widths, presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. influenced by genetic characteristics, degree of competition and growing position, and changing growth rates Growth Rates The compounded annualized rate of growth of a company's revenues, earnings, dividends, or other figures. Notes: Remember, historically high growth rates don't always mean a high rate of growth looking into the future. . The stems can vary in size and usually are identical in age, despite assumptions that these stems were not. Osage-orange would not have been missed easily by early 19th century botanists in the East, especially next to this home. In photographs, grade changes that suggest the site was modified for construction of the house or out-building prior to planting the tree. I suggest we respect this tree as the greatest of its kind on Earth and not try to inflate its pedigree beyond that. Guy Sternberg Guy Sternberg (born 1947) is the owner and operator of Starhill Forest Arboretum in Petersburg, Illinois. He is an arborist and author of Native Trees for North American Landscapes (2004) ISBN 0-88192-607-8 and (1996) ISBN 1-881527-66-2. Petersburg, Illinois |
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