various

From: Carlson, Pam (carlsonp@wdni.com)
Date: Wed 02 Apr 1997 - 22:42:00 EEST


Andrew - Hurrah for the Icebreaker stories!

>Does anyone but Alex & I care about this stuff? Should we take it to
private e-mail?

If you like. I've been using the ol' "down" button quite a lot, but
many people seem to be enjoying the elf thread.

>Australian eucalypt forest is so completely adapted to regular burning off
that many species (banksia for example, I think) actually require fire
to
reproduce.

The same is true of many N. American forests. Anyone remember all that
controversy about allowing Yellowstone Nat'l Park to burn a few years
ago?

David Cake:

>For interest, the oldest living thing is apparently a hundred
meters or so of shrub, a shrub that is sterile and reproduces by
budding,
and thus is all effectively the one individual, somewhere in Tasmania.
Its
location is a secret. Its 45, 000 years old IIRC.

Spiff! That's as nifty as the world's largest organism: a giant
underground fungus that covers much of soggy, southwestern Washington
(Lovely Washington state, that is - not the rodent-ridden capital city
back east.) This critter is several miles long, and as far as anyone can
tell, a single organism.

Just think, a visit to our famous fungus could be the a highspot on your
summer tour of the Pacific Northwest, which would of course include
GLORANTHA CON V in Victoria, BC, July 25-27, 1997. Added bonus: there
are no poisonous snakes here!

(I was watching a garter-snake spring jamboree in the forest yesterday,
and reflected that if I were in Australia, I would have been fleeing for
my life...)

Looking forward to seeing you all this summer!

Pam

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