Meet Adonis, Europe's oldest living inhabitant - CNN

Meet Adonis, Europe's oldest living inhabitant

Adonis, a Bosnian pine, is more than 1,075 years old, lives in the alpine forests of the Pindos mountains in northern Greece.

Story highlights

  • Millennium-old Bosnian pine discovered by a group of scientists
  • The pine was 750 years old when Newton formulated his laws of motion

(CNN)Europe's oldest living inhabitant goes by the name of Adonis, lives in the highlands of northern Greece and is over 1,075 years old.

No, the last part isn't a typo -- Adonis is a tree.
    The millennium-old Bosnian pine was discovered by a group of scientists from Stockholm University, the University of Mainz and the University of Arizona, who announced their findings Friday.
      World's oldest cypress tree burns
      World's oldest cypress tree burns

        JUST WATCHED

        World's oldest cypress tree burns

      MUST WATCH

      World's oldest cypress tree burns 01:01
      It is one of more than a dozen trees over 1,000 years old located in a forest high in the Pindos mountains near to the Greek border with Albania.
      The team took a core of its wood, which measured one meter in diameter, and counted the annual rings, determining it is the oldest known living tree in Europe.
        It still lags a few thousand years behind the world's oldest living tree. That distinction belongs to a bristlecone pine in the White Mountains of California over 5,000 years old.
        But Adonis would have witnessed its fair share of history, including the Byzantine Empire at its peak as well as the subsequent rise and fall of the Ottoman empire.
        The tree was 100 years old when Macbeth was crowned King of Scotland and was 750 years old when Isaac Newton formulated his laws of motion.
        "It is quite remarkable that this large, complex and impressive organism has survived so long in such an inhospitable environment, in a land that has been civilized for over 3,000 years" said dendrochronologist Paul J. Krusic, who led the expedition.
          The scientists hope to use variations in the rings to glean important historic details about climatic and environmental conditions going back hundreds of years.