Si supieras.......Olé !!!!
Amsterdam
Cimetière pour animaux / Pet cemetery - Mon Repos
Petit phare gaspésien
Totem multidirectionnel (2)
à l'abordage ,,,,
Loquat , spring fruit!
HBM in Arcachon
Photo 497
KRAKOW -Cloth Hall at the Market Place
Bonne semaine/Good week.
Quelquefois il se le mérite ...lui là haut ....Et…
Nature ontarienne
Le seul banc sur la plage.....
"My left foot".
In the valley.2
Groenveldse molen
Sant JUDWAL Saint Judual
Vision curative / Healing vision
Cabanon du Québec maritime / Galpão marítimo de Qu…
Obliquidade marítima / Obliquité maritime
Obliquité maritime / Obliquità marittima
Église catholique Saint-Laurent
Hore sa!
Socially distanced outdoor dining Eastbourne 15 4…
la bonne ambiance,
mise au point,,,
danza aerea
Hosen ...
17 avril, journée mondiale du cirque
Phare away en Gaspesia !
asparagus waste (good for creames & soups)
Feldkirch Österreich
Kleine Sitzprobe (3*PiP)
Toronto suburbs - 1986
Plage rugueuse sous ciel majestueux
Life is balance.
Voguer sur les arbustes / Navegar em arbustos
Mélissa de Caraquet
Le Québec marin
Die Verpackung ... (PiP)
Je suis un site religieux , j'ai 676 ans , je bril…
Christiane !! Escarpins Noëliens / Christmas high…
Jeu d'ombres podoérotiques / Podoerotic shades - M…
Santez SEVA Sainte SEVE 1/4
See also...
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
" Amazing Nature - Einmalige Natur - La nature unique - La natura unica "
Gorges, canyons, mountains, lakes - CLOSED - NEW ADMIN NEEDED
Gorges, canyons, mountains, lakes - CLOSED - NEW ADMIN NEEDED
Tree ( The beauty of Trees captured by photography )
Tree ( The beauty of Trees captured by photography )
Scotland / Schottland / Écosse / Scotia / Caledonia
Scotland / Schottland / Écosse / Scotia / Caledonia
Keywords
Am Monadh Ruadh
The Cairngorms National Park is hugely diverse; it is a living, working landscape from the wild high mountains, to the heather moorlands and peatlands, to the magnificent forests, the farms and crofts, and the wetlands and rivers which wind through the flood plains.
The Caledonian Forest takes its name from the Romans who called Scotland ‘Caledonia’ meaning wooded heights and covered much of the Highlands and what we know as the Cairngorms National Park today. The Scots pine we see now are directly descended from these first pines, that arrived in Scotland following the Late Glacial period around 7,000 BCE and formed the westernmost outpost of the Boreal Forest in Europe.
It is estimated to have reached a maximum coverage of 1.5 million hectares around 5,000 BCE. Then as the climate became wetter and windier the forest reduced significantly by 2,000 BCE and from this time onwards human intervention reduced the forest to its current extent.
Today the Caledonian Forest exists in 35 remnants across the Highlands of Scotland, the only climatic region in the UK suitable to support it. These last remaining forests have had to adapt to the Scottish environment and as such are globally unique in their ecological characteristics and forms an unbroken 9,000 year chain of natural evolution.
Many species have flourished in the Caledonian Forest over the thousands of years. Prior to forest clearances in Neolithic times, you would have found beavers, wild boar, lynx, brown bears, grey wolves, elk and wild horses. These species are unfortunately extinct in the forests today, but are still home to some of the rarest wildlife in the UK; the mountain hare, pine marten, red deer, red fox, red squirrel, roe deer, Scottish wildcat, the capercaillie, crested tit and Scottish crossbill.
cairngorms.co.uk/discover-explore/landscapes-scenery/woodlands-forests
The Caledonian Forest takes its name from the Romans who called Scotland ‘Caledonia’ meaning wooded heights and covered much of the Highlands and what we know as the Cairngorms National Park today. The Scots pine we see now are directly descended from these first pines, that arrived in Scotland following the Late Glacial period around 7,000 BCE and formed the westernmost outpost of the Boreal Forest in Europe.
It is estimated to have reached a maximum coverage of 1.5 million hectares around 5,000 BCE. Then as the climate became wetter and windier the forest reduced significantly by 2,000 BCE and from this time onwards human intervention reduced the forest to its current extent.
Today the Caledonian Forest exists in 35 remnants across the Highlands of Scotland, the only climatic region in the UK suitable to support it. These last remaining forests have had to adapt to the Scottish environment and as such are globally unique in their ecological characteristics and forms an unbroken 9,000 year chain of natural evolution.
Many species have flourished in the Caledonian Forest over the thousands of years. Prior to forest clearances in Neolithic times, you would have found beavers, wild boar, lynx, brown bears, grey wolves, elk and wild horses. These species are unfortunately extinct in the forests today, but are still home to some of the rarest wildlife in the UK; the mountain hare, pine marten, red deer, red fox, red squirrel, roe deer, Scottish wildcat, the capercaillie, crested tit and Scottish crossbill.
cairngorms.co.uk/discover-explore/landscapes-scenery/woodlands-forests
Annalia S., Annemarie, Berny, Marco F. Delminho and 4 other people have particularly liked this photo
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