It would be possible to find the age of a tree using radiocarbon dating. This is because as a tree lays down each of its growth rings it is only the outer layers which continue to exchange carbon with the atmosphere. Therefore, by dating a sample of wood from the INNER ring of the tree you could find out when it first began to grow.
Unfortunately this process would be slightly pointless for two reasons, firstly you would have to kill the tree, and secondly dendrochronology, or tree ring dating remains the most accurate dating method available to archaeologists (where a suitable sample can be found) so it would make much more sense to just count the rings (if the tree was still living) or use dendrochronology to match up the rings and find a date (if the tree has been dead).
Yes, it is possible but only for a dead tree.
redwood trees adaptations
Deer, squirrles, and gophers all eat plants in the redwood forests.
Their bark is fire resisted. This is one of the reasons they live for about 600 years from the forest fires.
Deciduous means falling off at maturity or tending to fall off (deriving from the Latin word decidere, to fall off)[1] and is typically used in reference to trees or shrubs that lose their leaves seasonally and to the shedding of other plant structures such as petals after flowering or fruit when ripe.Typically just reffered to as DECIDUOUS FOREST.
No. Radiocarbon dating can only be used to date the age of biological objects that are dead.
Yes, it is possible but only for a dead tree.
Rocks and minerals do not form The Redwood Forest. Trees form the redwood forest, specifically, redwood trees.
The Oakland region of California has redwood forests.
Red
redwood trees adaptations
More than a few.
Only oak trees produce acorns. If a redwood forest has any oaks, they would have acorns, but redwood trees are conifers and produce cones, not acorns.
dome is to mountain as redwood is to forest woods and forests are the same
Actually, the redwood forest is located mainly in California, not on the map.
Redwood Forest Trail - 1950 is rated/received certificates of: Finland:K-12 USA:Approved (PCA #14236)
Redwood