Old Bottle Butt

Stoutest known red bloodwood (Corymbia gummifera), circumference 17.5 m (16.3 m?), height 52 m.

Kermandie Queen

Stoutest eucalyptus – a mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans F.Muell.). Circumference 21.65 m, height 60 m. Suffered burns during the fire in January 2019.

Whitelaw Tree

Largest and also stoutest shining gum (Eucalyptus nitens H.Deane & Maiden). 57.5 m high, girth 14.9 m, volume 200 m³.

Moreton Bay Fig in Bellingen

Giant fig tree – Moreton Bay Fig (Ficus macrophylla Desf. ex Pers.) with a girth of 18 m, 50 m high. In fact these are two trees together – if their trunks are measured together, circumference is 29 m, but 18 m is the circumference of the largest tree.

The Boab Prison Tree, Derby

The Boab Prison Tree, Western Australia. Girth 14.64 m

An unusual boab (Adansonia gregorii), circumference 14.64 m, height just 9.5 m. It was used to lock up indigenous Australians in the 1860s on their way to sentencing.

Mount Cripps Giant (Australian Oak)

The largest Australian oak (Eucalyptus obliqua L’Hér.). Girth 21.08 m, height 60.9 m, volume 341 m3. Tree has large hollows and may collapse soon.

Pù Mát Pride of Vietnam

The largest tree in Vietnam – more than 70 m high sa mu tree (Cunninghamia konishii). Its trunk has a circumference of 23.7 m, diameter of 5.5 m.

Arbol del Tule (Árbol del Tule)

Árbol del Tule. Girth - 36.2 m

One of the stoutest trees on Earth, Montezuma cypress (Taxodium mucronatum). Girth 36.2 m, diameter 11.62 m, height 35.4 m. Discounting the buttresses of the trunk the diameter – 9.38 m. Volume 750 m³. Age estimated to be 1,400 – 1,600 years. Sacred Zapotec tree.

General Grant Tree

General Grant Tree sometimes around 1936

Giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum (Lindl.)), the second largest tree in the world. Height 81.5 m, girth at breast height 27.8 m, volume 1,320 m3. This beautiful tree is declared as a National Shrine, a memorial to those who died in the war.