
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Using a complex network of chemical signals, trees talk to each other and form alliances with fellow trees, even other species. In fact, whole forests exist as a kind of superorganism. And some trees are incredibly old. Did you know a single bristlecone pine can live up to 6,000 years? And the root mass of aspens might live 100,000 years? We explore the science and history of trees and talk with Richard Powers about his epic novel "The Overstory."
Original Air Date: April 28, 2018
Guests:
Mark Hirsch — Richard Powers — Suzanne Simard — Amos Clifford — Daegan Miller
Interviews In This Hour:
A Year In The Life Of A Tree — Listening to the Mother Trees — Richard Powers on Writing the Inner Life of Trees — Bathing in the Beauty of the Trees — General Sherman, Karl Marx, and Other Aliases of Earth's Largest Tree
By Wisconsin Public Radio4.6
914914 ratings
Using a complex network of chemical signals, trees talk to each other and form alliances with fellow trees, even other species. In fact, whole forests exist as a kind of superorganism. And some trees are incredibly old. Did you know a single bristlecone pine can live up to 6,000 years? And the root mass of aspens might live 100,000 years? We explore the science and history of trees and talk with Richard Powers about his epic novel "The Overstory."
Original Air Date: April 28, 2018
Guests:
Mark Hirsch — Richard Powers — Suzanne Simard — Amos Clifford — Daegan Miller
Interviews In This Hour:
A Year In The Life Of A Tree — Listening to the Mother Trees — Richard Powers on Writing the Inner Life of Trees — Bathing in the Beauty of the Trees — General Sherman, Karl Marx, and Other Aliases of Earth's Largest Tree

90,906 Listeners

21,971 Listeners

43,838 Listeners

38,482 Listeners

6,822 Listeners

43,548 Listeners

27,163 Listeners

21,619 Listeners

11,646 Listeners

2,860 Listeners

9,182 Listeners

8,394 Listeners

10,142 Listeners

6,404 Listeners

16,357 Listeners

10 Listeners

46 Listeners

55 Listeners

86 Listeners