A continuación se incluye una lista de árboles individuales . Los árboles que se enumeran aquí se consideran importantes o específicos por su contexto histórico, nacional, geográfico, natural o mitológico. La lista incluye árboles reales ubicados en todo el mundo, así como árboles de mitos y religiones.
África
Viviendo
Histórico
Asia
Viviendo
Histórico
Europa
Viviendo
Histórico
América del norte
Viviendo
Histórico
Petrified
Other
- Anthem Christmas tree, the tallest Christmas tree in the United States, erected annually at the Outlets at Anthem outside Phoenix, Arizona.
- Boston Christmas Tree. Since 1971, given to Boston by the people of Nova Scotia in thanks for their assistance during the 1917 Halifax Explosion. Located in the Boston Common.
- Capitol Christmas Tree, the tree erected annually on the West Front Lawn of the United States Capitol, in Washington, D.C.
- Chicago Christmas Tree, the annual tree located in Millennium Park in the city of Chicago. Historically, the tree was located in Grant Park and Daley Plaza.
- Grove Christmas Tree, a 100-foot tree that is lit every year at The Grove at Farmer's Market in Los Angeles, California.
- Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree, a Christmas tree on display every December in Rockefeller Center, New York City.
- The Tree of Life, a fourteen-story artificial tree in Disney's Animal Kingdom at Walt Disney World in Florida.
Central America
Living
South America
Living
Historical
Petrified
Oceania
Living
Historical
- El Grande, a mountain ash once regarded as Australia's largest tree by volume, killed by a forestry burnoff in 2003.
- The Tree of Knowledge at Barcaldine, Queensland under which the Australian Labor Party was traditionally founded. In an act of vandalism, the tree was poisoned and was eventually declared dead in October 2006.
- The pine of One Tree Hill, a radiata pine which stood alone until 2000 atop Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill, an extinct volcanic cone in Auckland, New Zealand.
- The Old Gum Tree, Glenelg, South Australia, where the proclamation of the establishment of Government of the province of South Australia was read in 1836.
- The Explorers Tree, marked by the explorers who crossed the Blue Mountains (New South Wales) in 1813.
- Jacaranda, University of Sydney, famous tree in the main Quadrangle. Planted 1928. Died of old age in 2016, it was replaced by a clone the following year.[83]
- Separation Tree, a famous tree that was a Melbourne landmark and is best known as the site where the citizens of the city congregated on 15 November 1850 to celebrate when the news that Victoria was to separate from the colony of New South Wales.[84] Following attacks by vandals it died in 2015.
- The Directions Tree was a sacred tree in the Birthing Woods, carrying profound cultural importance to the Djab Wurrung people, in Victoria, Australia was bulldozed in 2020[85] to make way for a highway despite the efforts of many trying to protect it.[86] This event caused significant uproar and was part of a larger legal battle for the protection of the Birthing Woods as being a culturally significant location having been overturned since the 2013 decision.[87]
Mythological and religious trees
See also
References
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The large tree at Hook and Cantitoe Roads is depicted on the Bedford town seal and predates the town's founding in 1680.
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External links
- Map of this list (in progress)
- World’s first tree reconstructed 385 million-year-old tree