Yes they can. They're found in the Sierra Nevada, but their seeds have been planted all over the world. They thrive in Oregon and Washington state. There are probably a few hundred thousand growing in the Pacific Northwest. Some of them are over 120 years old and have surpassed 10 feet in diameter. They love the temperate climate. They don't fare well in the Midwest; I've never spotted any there on my travels. I saw one in New York on Long Island at an aroboretum. It was not doing well. Nor are the sequoias near the Capitol Building and White House. Too humid in the summer, too cold in the winter. Seen some in Utah, but it's too hot and dry there for them to do well. Out side of the US, there are some in Bulgaria that are doing very well. Germany has many groves, and there are many specimens in England. Hope this helps.
The scientific name for giant sequoia is Sequoiadendron giganteum.
No. As a conifer, the sequoia is a gymnosperm.
Sadly everything dies eventually, including the giant sequoia.
The Giant Sequoia Tree grows to 83 meters.
Giant Sequoia National Monument was created in 2000.
Look at Sequoia trees
Most notably Giant Sequoia trees.
The giant Sequoia tree grows only in the western hemisphere, in the Sierra Nevada mountain range of California. They belong to the same family as the Redwood tree but are a separate species.
No
The tree is the sequoia, a giant redwood.
The Toyota Sequoia is named after the giant sequoia trees found in California.
The Sequoia is one.