Cover art for The Ancients
Published
Allen & Unwin, March 2025
ISBN
9781761069239
Format
Softcover, 304 pages
Dimensions
23.4cm × 15.3cm

The Ancients Discovering the world's oldest surviving trees in wild Tasmania

Not in stock
Fast $7.95 flat-rate shipping!
Only pay $7.95 per order within Australia, including end-to-end parcel tracking.
100% encrypted and secure
We adhere to industry best practice and never store credit card details.
Talk to real people
Contact us seven days a week – our staff are here to help.

In wild Tasmania there are trees whose direct ancestors lived with dinosaurs. Many of those alive today are thousands of years old, and some have been growing for ten millennia or more. They are mostly hard to reach, hidden in forest valleys or on remote mountains, survivors of human greed and fire.

Prize-winning nature writer Andrew Darby takes us on an island odyssey to discover the world's oldest surviving trees. First, he seeks the little-known King's Lomatia, perhaps the oldest single tree of all. Then the primeval King Billy, Pencil and Huon pines - with their vivid stories of admiration and destruction - and the majestic giant eucalypts. Finally, he looks at the 'mother tree', the Myrtle Beech, and Australia's only native winter deciduous tree, the golden Fagus.

On his journey he shares the stories of the people who identified the ancients - scientists and nature-lovers who teased out their secrets and came to venerate them. Lacking defences to fire, these awe-inspiring trees face growing threats as the climate changes. But their protection is becoming more sophisticated, offering hope for their future - and ours.

'The quiet magnificence of nature is reflected in the lyrical elegance of Darby's prose.' - Jonathan Green, ABC Radio's Blueprint for Living

'The Ancients will be relished by anyone who cares about the extraordinary island of Tasmania' - Nicholas Shakespeare, novelist and biographer

'A thrilling reminder of our good fortune in having these living monuments of deep time on our doorstep' - Sydney Morning Herald

'The Ancients threads together colonial history, personal reflections and conservation campaigns to deepen our appreciation of our "ancient" backyard. Darby's experiences communing alone with these colossal beings often provide the book's most enriching education on the sheer force of these wild elders.' - Saturday Paper

Related books