World's oldest tree turns 4,847 year-old today


Even if people have laid eyes on the world's oldest tree, there's a good chance they didn't
 realize it.
 That's because the United States Forest Service keeps all information 
about the 4,847-year-old Great Basin bristlecone pine — including its
 exact location — completely under wraps to protect it from any potential vandals, loggers, 
and researchers who may be interested in chopping it down.

The tree, known as Methuselah, is rumored to be located somewhere on a mountain in the 
Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest, part of Inyo National Forest in California. Even with that hint, 
searchers would be hard pressed to find the tree,
 however. The Forest Service refuses to release even as much as a picture of the tree out of 
fear that may happen.

While it might sound zany to be so protective over a tree, the Forest Service admittedly has
 good reason. 
The New York Times reports that the world's former oldest-known tree, an ancient pine in 
Nevada's Great Basin National Park, got chopped down by a graduate student in 1964:
There are a few accounts of what happened: The student, Donald R. Currey, 
said in a PBS documentary
 that the normal approach to coring a tree was not working and that he wasn't experienced
 enough to 
know what to do, so he cut it down with the help of some foresters.
 Members of the forest service said 
he got his drill bit stuck in the tree, and so he and the foresters cut it down to remove his tool