Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. An Inland Empire city has approved a development project within 450 feet of the third oldest known living organism in the world — ...
One of the world’s oldest living organisms — which once sprouted next to giant ground sloths and other prehistoric creatures — will soon sit 550 feet from industrial buildings. After months of debate ...
Atlanta is known as the "City in the Forest," but, largely due to ongoing development, the canopy is shrinking. While the city recently amended its tree protection ordinance to increase fees for ...
The future of the world's oldest oak tree is secure after conservation groups, city officials and a real estate developer were able to reach an agreement over a new development project. The Jurupa Oak ...
An Inland Empire city has approved a development project 450 feet away from the third oldest known living organism in the world — a sprawling, shrub-like oak tree that is more than 13,000 years old.