M.D. Vaden
vadenphotography.com
Not sure if I'll hear much back. But I email Robert Van Pelt in WA, about big trees like redwoods, as to whether there is any research about old trees causing liquefaction, or, big trees constricting their own undersides with the immense weight.
My hypothesis, is that they do, and may be the reason why many old redwoods have been hollow beneath, lacking healthy tissue there.
If my facts are somewhat correct, a tree like Lost Monarch should weigh about 3,000,000 pounds, for just the trunk and main stem weight - more for foliage. And even more for rain weight.
That's a cross section of 530 square feet, or 76,400 square inches. Meaning about 2/3 of the weight of one bag of concrete pressing on every single square inch. About 40 pounds per square inch.
My computer is on a table that's 30" x 50". To apply the same pressure to that size table top, would mean stacking 1000 to 1200 bags of concrete over it.
Home Depot man told me there are 42 bags of concrete per pallet. So that would mean a vertical column stack of 23 to 28 PALLETS of concrete over my table top, to exert the pressure pressing downward in a giant coast redwood trunk.
In the trunk is narrower, like Adventure tree, and weight somewhat comparable, then the pressure would be even greater.
After seeing tree cambium get restricted and damaged by rope, small branches, roots and other obstacles, I can't imagine cambium standing a chance beneath that kind of pressure.
Anyway, this is a recent brainstorm.
My hypothesis, is that they do, and may be the reason why many old redwoods have been hollow beneath, lacking healthy tissue there.
If my facts are somewhat correct, a tree like Lost Monarch should weigh about 3,000,000 pounds, for just the trunk and main stem weight - more for foliage. And even more for rain weight.
That's a cross section of 530 square feet, or 76,400 square inches. Meaning about 2/3 of the weight of one bag of concrete pressing on every single square inch. About 40 pounds per square inch.
My computer is on a table that's 30" x 50". To apply the same pressure to that size table top, would mean stacking 1000 to 1200 bags of concrete over it.
Home Depot man told me there are 42 bags of concrete per pallet. So that would mean a vertical column stack of 23 to 28 PALLETS of concrete over my table top, to exert the pressure pressing downward in a giant coast redwood trunk.
In the trunk is narrower, like Adventure tree, and weight somewhat comparable, then the pressure would be even greater.
After seeing tree cambium get restricted and damaged by rope, small branches, roots and other obstacles, I can't imagine cambium standing a chance beneath that kind of pressure.
Anyway, this is a recent brainstorm.
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