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Inside a Western Red Cedar Tree, Quinault Rain Forest, Olympic National Park, Washington

This is the view inside a 2,000-year-old Western Red Cedar tree, still living in the Quinault Rain Forest, Washington. As cedar trees age, they hollow out to allow fierce winds to blow through them, rather than toppling during storms. The only living part is a vein that's two feet in diameter. The tree, located in Olympic National Park, however, is so huge another tree grows out of its top.

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Filename
QuinaultGiantCedar.jpg
Copyright
Copyright 2002 Kevin Ebi/Livingwilderness.com. All rights reserved.
Image Size
3683x5524 / 5.8MB
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Western Red Cedar Western Redcedar Thuja plicata tree evergreen conifer coniferous old ancient decay cavern cave giant huge Quinault Quinault Rain Forest Olympic National Park Olympic national park Washington United States of America USA nature scenic
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This is the view inside a 2,000-year-old Western Red Cedar tree, still living in the Quinault Rain Forest, Washington. As cedar trees age, they hollow out to allow fierce winds to blow through them, rather than toppling during storms. The only living part is a vein that's two feet in diameter. The tree, located in Olympic National Park, however, is so huge another tree grows out of its top.
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