Italian scientists have discovered a juniper bush in northern Finland that could be the oldest in the world. It is estimated to be 1,647 years old.
Researchers from the University of Padua discovered a dead juniper bush during a visit to the Kevo Subarctic Research Institute in Utsjoki, Lapland, in 2021. Initial analysis of the annual rings dated the bush to 1,242 years.
A new analysis of the tree rings in 2024 showed that the shrub is 1,647 years old. Scientists estimate that it started growing around 260 AD and died in 1906, but it is possible that it is even older as it is difficult to count all the years accurately.
– Juniper is the most widespread woody species in the world. It is found from sea level to the upper limits of vegetation, from Alaska to Etna, from Japan to Scotland. It is an extremely eclectic species, capable of tolerating scorching temperatures and aridity, such as in sandy dunes, or, conversely, in freezing environments near glaciers. Today, this record is joined by that of being the world’s oldest shrub, said the leader of the research group, Professor Marco Carrer of the University of Padua in a press release.
The shrub is the oldest ever dated by tree rings and the oldest woody plant in Europe determined by this method. Previously, other old junipers have also been found in Finland.
– The oldest juniper and the oldest woody plant in Finland was a 1,070-year-old specimen found in Lemmenjoki before this discovery. The age record of Finnish junipers has now been improved by almost 600 years, says Otso Suominen, Director of the Kevo Subarctic Research Institute.
In addition, four other juniper trees were found in Utsjoki that were over a thousand years old.