Sisters Olive Trees of Noah explained

The Sisters Olive Trees of Noah are a grove of sixteen olive trees in the Lebanese town of Bcheale.[1]

According to local folklore, the trees are at least 5,000 years old, perhaps even 6,000 years old or older.[2] [3] If this is correct, they may be the oldest non-clonal living trees in the world. The age of any of The Sisters has not been determined by dendrochronology (tree-ring dating) and possibly cannot be due to deterioration of the inner tree ring structures over time.

Folk legend also ascribes The Sisters as the source of the olive branch returned to Noah's Ark at the waning of the Biblical Flood.[4] [5] The trees still produce olives, and a preservation effort was undertaken by the non-profit organization Sisters Olive Oil, which marketed oil from these olives.[5]

See also

References

34.2016°N 35.8231°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The World’s Oldest Living Olive Trees Are Lebanese . Linda Pappagallo . January 8, 2013 . Green Prophet . April 28, 2013.
  2. Web site: Rare variants and olive trees . Ingo Helbig . February 14, 2013 . Beyond the Ion Channel . EuroEPINOMICS . April 28, 2013.
  3. Book: Carol Drinkwater. The Olive Tree. 8 September 2012. 2011. Orion. 978-0-297-85750-1. 18–.
  4. Web site: Olive Oil Ice Cream & The Ultra Premium EV Olive Oil Harvested From The Oldest Living Olive Trees On Earth . Dima Sharif . Dima Sharif, Bringing Food to Life . April 28, 2013.
  5. Web site: Bechealeh’s ancient trees still producing high-end olive oil . T.K. Maloy . October 31, 2012 . The Daily Star (Lebanon) . April 28, 2013.