Misplaced Pages

Exploding tree: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 23:37, 6 September 2009 edit96.51.231.59 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 21:35, 17 September 2009 edit undoEvosoho (talk | contribs)1,148 editsNo edit summaryNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
{{hoax}}
Some trees can ] when struck by ]. <ref></ref> <ref></ref> The strong ] is carried mostly by the water-conducting ] below the ], heating it up and boiling the water. The pressure of the steam can make the trunk burst. In ], the native ] are also known to ] during ] due to the high flammability of vaporised eucalyptus oil produced by the tree naturally. <ref></ref><ref> </ref> The ] explodes all by itself, ripe seed pods cracking open with such violence as to hurl seeds up to 100 meters away. Some trees can ] when struck by ]. <ref></ref> <ref></ref> The strong ] is carried mostly by the water-conducting ] below the ], heating it up and boiling the water. The pressure of the steam can make the trunk burst. In ], the native ] are also known to ] during ] due to the high flammability of vaporised eucalyptus oil produced by the tree naturally. <ref></ref><ref> </ref> The ] explodes all by itself, ripe seed pods cracking open with such violence as to hurl seeds up to 100 meters away.



Revision as of 21:35, 17 September 2009

Suspected hoaxThe truthfulness of this article has been questioned. It is believed that some or all of its content may constitute a hoax. Please carefully verify any reliable sources used to support the claims in the article or section, and add reliable sources for any uncited claims. If the claims cannot be reliably sourced, consider placing the article at articles for deletion and/or removing the section in question. For blatant hoaxes, use {{db-hoax}} to identify it for speedy deletion instead. Further information and discussion may be on the article's talk page.

Some trees can explode when struck by lightning. The strong electric current is carried mostly by the water-conducting sapwood below the bark, heating it up and boiling the water. The pressure of the steam can make the trunk burst. In Australia, the native eucalyptus trees are also known to explode during bush fires due to the high flammability of vaporised eucalyptus oil produced by the tree naturally. The sandbox tree explodes all by itself, ripe seed pods cracking open with such violence as to hurl seeds up to 100 meters away.

Fictional tree explosions were the subject of a 2005 April Fools' Day hoax covered by National Public Radio, stating that maple trees in New England had been exploding due to a failure to collect their sap, causing pressure to build from the inside.

Exploding trees in fiction

  • In Larry Niven's fictional setting of Known Space, an alien race called the Tnuctipun used genetic engineering to create the stage tree, a tree which produces solid rocket fuel. Stage trees spread their seeds only when they are ignited.
  • The Integral Trees and The Smoke Ring, also by Niven, feature enormous inhabited trees in orbit around a neutron star. The tidal force keeps them under strong tension, and if they drift out of the habitable zone of the gas ring, they split in half with explosive force, sacrificing one half of the tree to save the other half.
  • In the book Brian's Winter by Gary Paulsen the main character believes he is hearing gunshots, and walks toward them, and finds out that sound is made by exploding trees.
  • In the Super Nintendo video game EarthBound there is an enemy in the Peaceful Rest Valley called the Territorial Oak which explodes when defeated and causes a great deal of damage to party members.
  • The fictional Tesla trees in Dan Simmons' Hyperion Cantos series supposedly let off gigantic blasts of lightning in order to secure fertilizer, similar in some ways to an explosion.
  • In Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein", Victor is inspired to pursue a life of science when he observes an oak exploding in a thunderstorm. (literally exploding, leaving the tree in thin ribbons of wood.)
  • In Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series, trees in the northern countries commonly explode by freezing, due to the extreme cold.
  • In Terry Goodkind's The Sword of Truth series, wizards and sorceresses use their gift to heat the sap inside trees to boil, until the tree explodes, sending jagged wood fragments in all directions and delivering horrendous wounds to those near it. Seen in Faith of the Fallen and Chainfire.
  • In David Zindell's Neverness descriptions of "popping noises" in the distance are heard and splinters found in the snow drifts when Mallory Ringess and company are posing as Alolai and travelling to the Devlaki tribe, Describing the explosions of trees due to the extreme colds found on Neverness (the planet)

See also

References

  1. Pinetum article on lightning
  2. Australian Severe Weather: 2006 Storm news
  3. CSUSTAN library
  4. Robertsward.com article
  5. NPR April Fool's: New England Suffers Maple Woes

Template:Exploding life

Stub icon

This tree-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories:
Exploding tree: Difference between revisions Add topic