King Clone

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File:King Clone.jpg
King Clone, the 11,700-year-old creosote bush ring in the Mojave Desert

King Clone is thought to be the oldest creosote bush ring in the Mojave Desert. The ring is estimated to be 11,700 years old, making it one of the oldest living organisms on Earth. This single clonal colony plant of Larrea tridentata reaches up to Template:Convert in diameter, with an average diameter of Template:Convert.<ref>Creosote Bush: Long-Lived Clones in the Mojave Desert, Frank C. Vasek, American Journal of Botany, Vol. 67, No. 2 (February 1980), pp. 246-255</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="LV">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Geography

The King Clone ring is on restricted-access land in the central Mojave Desert, near the towns of Lucerne Valley and Landers. It is in the Creosote Rings Preserve of the Lucerne Valley and Johnson Valley.<ref name="LV" />

Dating methodology

King Clone was identified and the age estimated by Frank Vasek, a professor at the University of California, Riverside. After Vasek hypothesized that the creosote ring was, in fact, one organism, Leonel da Silveira Lobo O'Reilly Sternberg (then a graduate student working in Vasek's lab), documented that plants within a ring had more similar characteristics than those from other plant clusters. Vasek then used two methods to estimate the age of the ring. One method counted rings and measured the distance of annual growth, and the other used radiocarbon dating on pieces of wood found in the center of the ring, and measuring their distances from each other and the living bushes. The two dating methods yielded similar results (age about 11,700 years).<ref name="LV" />

Public appearances

The plant was featured in an episode of Ripleys Believe It Or Not in 1983. This plant was in the 'Desert Worlds' episode of the David Attenborough TV series The Green Planet where he revisited the plant in 2022, after previously filming it in 1982 for 'The Baking Deserts' episode of The Living Planet. The plant had grown by less than one inch (25 mm) during this time.<ref name="GreenPlanet2022">Template:Cite episode</ref>

See also

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References

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