- Arbre du Ténéré
_fr. L'Arbre du Ténéré, known in English as the Tree of Ténéré, was a solitary
acacia , of either "Acacia raddiana " or "Acacia tortilis ", that was once considered the most isolatedtree on Earth — the only one within more than convert|400|km|mi. It was a landmark on caravan routes through theTénéré region of theSahara in northeastNiger — so well known that it is the only tree to be shown on a map at a scale of 1:4,000,000. It was located at approximately coord|17|45|00|N|10|04|00|E.It was the last surviving tree of a group of trees that grew when the
desert was less parched than it is today. The tree had stood alone for decades. During the winter of 1938–1939 a well was dug near the tree and it was found that the roots of the tree reached thewater table 33–36 meters below the surface.Commander of the A.M.M., Michel Lesourd, of the _fr. "Service central des affaires sahariennes" [Central service of Saharan affairs] , saw the tree on
May 21 ,1939 :One must see the Tree to believe its existence. What is its secret? How can it still be living in spite of the multitudes of camels which trample at its sides. How at each
azalai does not a lost camel eat its leaves and thorns? Why don't the numerous Touareg leading the salt caravans cut its branches to make fires to brew their tea? The only answer is that the tree is taboo and considered as such by the caravaniers.There is a kind of
superstition , a tribal order which is always respected. Each year the azalai gather round the Tree before facing the crossing of the Ténéré. The Acacia has become a living lighthouse; it is the first or the last landmark for the azalai leavingAgadez forBilma , or returning. [http://www.manntaylor.com/tenere2.html L'Arbre du Ténéré, Part 2] ]The tree was knocked down by an allegedly drunk
Libya n truck driver in 1973. OnNovember 8 ,1973 the dead tree was relocated to the Niger National Museum in the capitalNiamey . It has been replaced by a simple metal sculpture representing a tree.This was not the tree's first encounter with a truck. In his book _fr. "L'épopée du Ténéré", French ethnologist and explorer
Henri Lhote described his two journeys to the Tree of Ténéré. His first visit was in 1934 on the occasion of the firstautomobile liaison betweenDjanet andAgadez . He describes the tree as "an Acacia with a degenerative trunk, sick or ill in aspect. Nevertheless, the tree has nice green leaves, and some yellow flowers". He visited it again twenty-five years later, onNovember 26 ,1959 with theBerliet -Ténéré mission, but found that it had been badly damaged after a vehicle had collided with it:Before, this tree was green and with flowers; now it is a colourless thorn tree and naked. I cannot recognise it — it had two very distinct trunks. Now there is only one, with a stump on the side, slashed, rather than cut a metre from the soil. What has happened to this unhappy tree? Simply, a lorry going to
Bilma has struck it... but it has enough space to avoid it... the taboo, sacred tree, the one which no nomad here would have dared to have hurt with his hand... this tree has been the victim of a mechanic...ee also
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List of famous trees References
External links
* [http://www.agadez-niger.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=627 Photo Album of the Tenere Tree]
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