The Ancients: Discovering the world's oldest surviving trees in wild Tasmania
By (Author) Andrew Darby
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
4th March 2025
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Conservation of the environment
582.1609946
Paperback
304
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
356g
In wild Tasmania there are trees whose direct ancestors lived with dinosaurs. Many alive today are thousands of years old, and some are aged ten thousand - or greater. They are mostly hard to reach, hidden among forests or on remote mountains, survivors of past human exploitation and fire.
Prize-winning nature writer Andrew Darby set out on an improbable odyssey to discover these, the world's oldest surviving trees. First he probed the little-known King's Lomatia, perhaps the oldest single tree of all. He sought out primeval King Billy, Pencil and Huon pines, with their vivid stories of admiration and timber profit. Then he plunged into the world of the giant eucalypts, of a 'mother tree', the Myrtle Beech, and of Australia's only endemic winter deciduous tree, the golden Fagus.
On this island-wide journey he found the people who discovered the ancients, scientists and nature-lovers who teased out their secrets and came to venerate them. Mainly defenceless to fire, these uplifting trees face growing threats under climate change. But their protection is becoming more sophisticated, offering hope for their future - and ours.
Andrew Darby is the author of Flight Lines, on long distance migratory shorebirds, and Harpoon on whales and whaling. Flight Lines won the Royal Zoological Society of NSW's Whitley Award for the Best Natural History, and the Premier's Prize for Non-fiction in the Tasmanian Literary Awards. It was shortlisted for the Prime Minister's Award for Non-fiction. He was the Hobart correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.