noun
redwood sense 3a
noun
redwood sense 3a
noun
redwood sense 3a
noun
redwood sense 3a
The first known use of coast redwood was circa 1897
coauthornoun
an author who works with another author
coauthornoun
an author who works with another author
co-optverb
to take into a group (as a faction, movement, or culture) : assimilate
take over, appropriate sense 1
a style co-opted by advertisers
co-optverb
to take into a group (as a faction, movement, or culture) : assimilate
take over, appropriate sense 1
a style co-opted by advertisers
coworkernoun
a fellow worker
coworkernoun
a fellow worker
coast redwoodnoun
redwood
1 Hart said there’s currently no means of taking a continuous walk through vast stretches of coast redwoods — the tallest trees on Earth.
2 The world's tallest living tree is the coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens), which grows along the Pacific Coast of the United States, mainly in California.
3 Here live the coast redwood tree species, known as the tallest trees on the planet, reaching up to 350 feet.
4 The parks become more crowded from Memorial Day on, when the coast redwoods are shrouded in life-sustaining fog, and inland conditions are warm and sunny.
5 Enduring but not static Even species as enduring as coast redwoods are affected by climate change.
6 The coast redwood, also famously decay-resistant, could be used in habitat restoration.
7 French, Bridle, and Stream Trail Loop Just east of Oakland sits Dr. Aurelia Reinhardt Redwood Regional Park, a 1,833-acre green space home to a forest of 150-foot coast redwoods and wildlife like golden eagles and deer.
8 The shoots from stumps of felled coast redwoods are each capable of becoming a full-size tree.