Not exact matches
-- John Muir, conservationist December 5, 2007, San Francisco, CA: Muir Woods National Monument, one of the last — and most beloved —
stands of old - growth
coast redwoods in the world, will celebrate its 100th anniversary as a National Monument on January 9, 2008.
Tucked into an ocean - facing fold of Mount Tamalpais, the signature peak just north of the Golden Gate Bridge in Marin County, Muir Woods National Monument protects the last
stand of uncut old - growth
coast redwoods in the Bay Area, where loggers had all but denuded the region by the late 1800s...
Muir Woods National Monument, one of the last — and most beloved —
stands of old - growth
coast redwoods in the world, will celebrate its 100th anniversary as a National Monument on January 9, 2008.
Standing more than 300 feet tall, the
coast redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens) will take your breath away.
[17] The tallest
coast redwood easily accessible to the public is the Founders Tree in Humboldt
Redwoods State Park,
standing over 346 ft tall.
Muir woods is now the last remaining contiguous
stand of old growth
coast redwoods in Marin County.
It protects 554 acres (224 ha), [4] of which 240 acres (97 ha) are old growth
coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) forests, [5] one of a few such
stands remaining in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Muir Woods National Monument protects one of the only
stands of old - growth
Coast Redwoods left in the Bay Area.
Witness one of the last
stands of ancient
coast redwood forest at Muir Woods.